field notes
linen klay is a studio practice working with clothing as an inhabited form.
the garments emerge from a practice of rewilding — a return to contact with material, body, and lived terrain — where making is understood as an act of listening rather than styling.
within this context, the term field refers not to a theory, but to the lived space between body, material, and daily movement. it is the relational ground where use, wear, and presence unfold over time.
each piece is shaped around fortitude within daily dimension: durable, adaptable forms that support the body through movement, rest, and transition. variation is not decorative but structural, allowing the garment to respond to different lives, bodies, and conditions.
linen klay emerges alongside rewilding consciousness as an embodied extension of that inquiry — not as a philosophy to be worn, but as material form that supports presence through use.
the work does not instruct.
it offers a structure,
and leaves space for meaning to arise.