Hand-painted linen, worn-in colour, and the quiet charm of the human hand
This is The Striped Bandana by Exquisite J. In a system that produces tonnes of disposable clothing, we curate: one piece, one story. A radical view for ethical and aesthetic resistance — meaningful garments, an expression of good design. Slow fashion —made to last, made by hand.
The Striped Bandana arrives with lightness but not indifference. It rests against the skin like a breath of cool air — the kind you didn’t know you needed. 100% linen, fresh and airy, substantial enough to hold its shape but soft enough to tie, fold, or drape. The green stripes are hand-painted onto the fabric, creating a soft, watercolour-like transition of colour — no two alike. A checkered white-and-blue band with a single pink brushstroke decorates one side. A small, deliberate accent that transforms a simple square into a considered object. Wear it differently each time. Make it yours.
It honours the discipline of craftsmanship: nothing extra, nothing missing. The fringed hems are not an afterthought here — they’re a finish. A soft edge between control and release. The fabric, 100% linen, breathes like nothing else: cool in heat, crisp in humidity. Hand-painted pigment sinks into the fibres like ink into paper — alive, unrepeatable.
Blue and green, but not primary. A palette that belongs to deep water, shaded ivy, and the hour just before rain. The pink brushstroke? A quiet surprise. A wink.
Contemporary artisanal accessories for modern humans
The design: Bandana with hand-painted green stripes (watercolour effect) and fringed hems. One side features a checkered white-and-blue band with a pink brushstroke accent. Generous dimensions: 83 x 90cm. Lightweight, breathable, versatile — wear as a scarf, a necktie, a headband, or a bag accent.
The make: Made in Italy — by a small artisanal brand that oversees every step. Not a label of convenience, but a genuine commitment to craftsmanship. Every detail, from the hand-painted brushstroke to the final fringed edge, is curated with integrity and care. Each piece is one of a kind. No shortcuts. No repeats.
The Striped Bandana: painterly, not ordinary — artisanal, not afraid to be lived
The Striped Bandana offers something rare: an accessory that asks nothing of you. You don’t style it. You just tie it. And the brushstroke does the rest — a single gesture that turns a simple scarf into a signature.
• For the studio: folded into a slim band and tied low on a cotton shirt collar. A whisper of colour. Focus with style.
• For a walk: worn as a headband on a warm day. Or knotted loosely around a leather tote handle — not for decoration, but because the grip feels better.
• For an aperitivo: draped nonchalantly over the shoulders with a simple silk dress. A quiet confidence. Present, but never loud
For the modern humans who curate, not consume — whose wardrobe is a library of dog-eared favourites, each piece a chapter in their story.
🌟 The Striped Bandana – Exquisite J Limited edition — each piece unique, each brushstroke unrepeatable. Like a handwritten sentence in a world of printed text. For personal style. For life.
Available by appointment for private shopping in Milano or worldwide — from screen to doorstep.
P.S. Ask us about why a single pink brushstroke changes everything. Or how to build a uniform around one hand-painted bandana — from morning light to evening without a single tug at the knot. We are here for the conversations, not just the transactions.
From heatwaves to near-record ocean temperatures, Europe remains the fastest-warming continent
According to the latest European State of the Climate report (ESOTC 2025), published by Copernicus Climate Change Service and the World Meteorological Organisation, Europe remains the world’s fastest-warming continent.
The report, released on 29 April 2026, documents a year marked by record heatwaves, near-record ocean temperatures, destructive wildfires, shrinking glaciers, and mounting pressure on biodiversity. More than 95% of Europe experienced above-average temperatures in 2025.
Globally, 2025 ranked as the third-warmest year ever recorded, with planetary warming now reaching approximately 1.4°C above pre-industrial levels. If emissions continue at their current pace, the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C threshold could be exceeded before the end of this decade.
Across Europe, the signs of climate change are no longer isolated events but interconnected realities reshaping ecosystems, economies, and daily life.
Copernicus Climate: Europe in 2025
Temperature: Almost the entire continent saw above‑average temperatures. Several northern European countries logged their warmest or second‑warmest year.
Heatwaves: Europe endured its second most-severe heatwave on record; sub‑Arctic Fennoscandia saw its longest.
Wildfires: Record burnt area and fire emissions, led by August fires on the Iberian Peninsula.
Oceans: Highest annual sea surface temperature on record, with 86% of the region experiencing at least “strong” marine heatwave conditions.
Glaciers & snow: Net mass loss across all European glacier regions. Snow cover extent and mass both third lowest on record.
Floods/storms: Strong regional contrasts. Storms and flooding hit some areas, but overall less widespread than in recent years.
Energy: Renewables supplied 46.4% of Europe’s electricity. Solar power set a new contribution record (12.5%).
Temperature across Europe’s land and seas
According to the Copernicus Climate report, Europe is warming more than twice as fast as the global average — and 2025 brought that into sharp focus. On land, almost the entire continent (at least 95%) saw above-average annual temperatures, with Europe suffering its second most severe heatwave on record. At sea, the picture was equally alarming: the annual sea surface temperature for the European ocean region reached an all-time high, and a record 86% of the region experienced at least “strong” marine heatwave conditions.
Hydrological conditions in 2025
In 2025, much of northwestern to eastern Europe was drier than average, with annual precipitation totals 10–40% below normal. This led to record-low soil moisture in some areas and below-average river flow in 70% of Europe’s rivers. In contrast, southwestern and parts of northeastern Europe saw above-average precipitation, soil moisture, and river flow. These patterns also influenced sunshine, cloud cover, and climate-driven renewable power potential.
The contrasts aligned with prevailing atmospheric circulation. High pressure brought drier, sunnier conditions to northwestern, central, and eastern Europe, while low pressure over the North Atlantic shifted storm tracks further south toward southwestern Europe.
Across the Iberian Peninsula, spring brought above-average rainfall, followed by summer heatwaves. This shift created abundant dried vegetation that fueled large wildfires.
Key messages
Soil moisture: 2025 ranked as one of the three driest years for soil moisture across Europe since 1992. In May, 35% of Europe experienced “extreme” agricultural drought.
Precipitation (northwest/central Europe): 2025 ranked among the ten driest years in 47 years for this region — a sharp contrast to the exceptionally wet conditions of 2023 and 2024.
River flooding: Despite several significant flood events, total flooded extent was the second lowest since 1992 and far smaller than the widespread flooding seen in 2023 and 2024.
Extreme precipitation: The share of Europe’s land area affected by extreme precipitation was below average, notably smaller than in several recent years — especially for the most extreme events.
Wildfire emissions: Annual wildfire emissions reached record highs in Spain (where contrasting hydrological conditions fueled large fires), as well as in Cyprus, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Germany.
Long heatwave in sub-Arctic Fennoscandia
In July 2025, sub-Arctic Fennoscandia experienced its longest and most severe heatwave on record, lasting 21 days from 12 July to 1 August. Temperatures near and within the Arctic Circle reached 30°C.
The region typically sees up to two “strong” heat stress days per year, but in 2025 some areas endured almost two weeks at this level. The combination of dry conditions and high temperatures produced “moderate” to “severe” drought during the heatwave, along with up to two weeks of elevated fire danger.
The heatwave coincided with a marine heatwave in the Norwegian Sea, as well as parts of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea.
Cold environments in a warming climate
From the Alps to the Arctic, Europe’s ice and snow cover is shrinking. The area experiencing winter days with freezing temperatures is also declining.
Snow cover: In 2025, end-of-season snow cover extent and mass were the third lowest in the 42-year record. In March alone, the snow-covered area was roughly 1.32 million km² below average — an area equivalent to France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria combined.
Glaciers: European glaciers recorded a net mass loss in 2025, with the most negative balances observed in Iceland.
Greenland: The Greenland Ice Sheet lost approximately 139 gigatonnes (Gt) of ice in 2025, equivalent to about 1.5 times the total ice stored in all European Alpine glaciers.
Climate policy and action: biodiversity
Biodiversity — the variety of life on Earth — is essential for a sustainable future, yet climate change is a major driver of its decline.
Healthy ecosystems provide clean air and water, fertile soils, and pollination, all of which underpin food security, livelihoods, and human health. Biodiversity also helps regulate the climate and buffers against extreme weather events.
Recognising this link, European policy frameworks have increasingly integrated climate and biodiversity. The EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030 aims to protect and restore nature. By the end of 2025, approximately half of the Strategy’s recommended actions were either in place or fully completed, with most of the remainder already underway.
Climate’s impact on biodiversity
Marine heatwaves have shifted from occasional to annual events, driving mass mortality, species shifts, and ecosystem disruption. From 2023 to 2025, the entire Mediterranean Sea experienced at least “strong” marine heatwave conditions each year.
Posidonia oceanica seagrass — covering ~19,000 km² of Europe’s coasts — is highly sensitive to heat. Thermal stress has driven a 34% decline in its meadows over 50 years. Yet conservation efforts over the past decade have stabilised some areas, boosting species richness, restoring fish nurseries, and enhancing carbon storage and coastal protection.
Peatland wildfires: Europe has lost more peatland proportionally than any other region. Remaining sites like Deurnsche Peel and Mariapeel (Netherlands) are vital. Dried-out peat ignites easily — in April 2020, a 710-hectare fire burned for four days and smouldered for two months. Such fires kill amphibians, ground-nesting birds, and Sphagnum mosses, degrading habitats. Solutions include green firebreaks, ecological corridors, buffer zones, and native reforestation.
Copernicus Climate: trends in climate indicators
The latest Copernicus Climate data shows a clear pattern: the planet is warming, oceans are absorbing more heat, ice is disappearing, and sea levels are rising. Europe and the Mediterranean are warming significantly faster than the global average.
Ocean heat content (upper 2000 m) has risen steadily since 1993.
Sea level rise (1999–2025)
Global: +3.7 mm per year
Europe: +2–4 mm per year
Greenhouse gases (annual increase since 2020)
CO₂: +2.6 ppm
CH₄: +11.6 ppb
Ice loss accelerating
Arctic sea ice (September): -33% since the 1980s
Antarctic sea ice (February): -20%
Ice loss since the 1970s:
Greenland: -5,747 Gt
Antarctica: -4,876 Gt
Global glaciers: -9,580 Gt
These indicators confirm that climate change is not a distant threat — it is an ongoing transformation already reshaping ecosystems, coastlines, and weather patterns worldwide.
Final thoughts
Reading the Copernicus 2025 Climate report (download it here), one might be tempted to highlight the positives. Renewables at 46%. Solar at a record 12.5%. Half of biodiversity actions completed.
Do not be fooled.
As climate scientist Kevin Anderson has long argued, every metric points the wrong way. Global temperature: up. Ocean heat: up. Sea levels: up. Ice loss: accelerating. Europe’s warming rate: twice the global average. The 1.5°C Paris threshold: set to be breached by the end of this decade — a decade earlier than predicted.
This is not progress. This is managed decline dressed up as hope.
Leaders knew the science. They had the tools. They chose delay. Most importantly, they chose fossil fuels. In doing so, they chose their own political timelines over the planet’s physical timelines. That is not a failure of capability. It is a failure of will — and of conscience.
The report does not show that we are on the right track. It shows that we are running off track, and those at the controls have intentionally refused to brake.
Modern minimalism, refined through precise tailoring — clean lines for bodies that move
This is The Cropped Tee by Ujoh. In a system that produces tonnes of disposable clothing, we curate: one piece, one story. A radical view for ethical and aesthetic resistance — meaningful garments, an expression of good design. Slow fashion —made to last, made by hand.
The Cropped Tee arrives with ease but not indifference. It sits on the body like a second thought — the kind you’re glad you had. A high-gauge knit, lightweight yet substantial. The round neckline is clean, unhurried. The half-sleeves fall at the right length. And then — the drawstring at the hem. A small, deliberate accent that transforms a simple tee into a considered object. Pull it gently. Shift the silhouette. Make it yours.
It honours the discipline of reduction: nothing extra, nothing missing. The cropped length is not a trend here — it’s a proportion. A modern pause between waist and belt. The fabric, 100% cotton, has been treated with care: the face resists pilling, the reverse holds a looped texture you’ll want to touch. A subtle lustre, born from a special finishing process, gives it a quiet glow.
Caramel, but not sweet. Warm, grounded, unisex. A colour that belongs to morning coffee, autumn light, and every skin tone. It catches light like worn leather or old honey.
Contemporary minimalist knitwear for modern humans
The design: Cropped tee with round neckline and half sleeves. Drawstring accent at the hem allows adjustable length and shape. High-gauge knit construction — lightweight but not sheer, soft but not fragile. Comfortable fit that follows the body without clinging. Material: 100% cotton. Anti-pilling treatment on the face; looped texture on the reverse; subtle lustre from a special finishing process.
The make: Made in Japan. Knit with precision, finished with patience. Fully considered inside out: every seam clean, every drawstring channel reinforced, every edge resolved. The cotton is handled, not hurried — washed, set, and finished to hold its shape wear after wear. Tangible quality designed to layer, to travel, to settle, to last.
The Cropped Tee: relaxed, not loose — refined, not rigid
The Cropped Tee offers something rare: a top that asks nothing of you. You don’t style it. You just wear it. And the drawstring does the rest — a single pull that turns a simple tee into a silhouette.
For the studio or home office: worn with wide-leg trousers. Half-sleeves keep you cool. Drawstring cinched slightly — a subtle lift, no tighter than needed. Focus without friction.
For a weekend market or walk: paired with high-waisted denim or soft shorts. Drawstring left loose. A silhouette that asks nothing of you — just freedom, just movement.
For an evening out: tucked loosely into a silk or cotton skirt. Or worn as-is over fluid tailored trousers. Gold hoops, a flat sandal, a quiet confidence. The peak of unassuming elegance — present, but never loud.
For the modern humans who curate, not consume — whose wardrobe is a library of dog-eared favourites, each piece a chapter in their story.
🌟 The Cropped Tee – Ujoh Limited edition. Like a quiet sentence in a noisy room — one for personal style. For life.
Available by appointment for private shopping in Milano or worldwide — from screen to doorstep. From our hands to your daily ritual.
P.S. Ask us about why a drawstring changes everything. Or how to build a uniform around one perfect cotton tee — from dawn to dark without a single tug at the hem. We are here for the conversations, not just the transactions.
Ecological debt: how we live beyond our means — using in just 123 days the resources meant to last a year
Overshoot Day in Italy fell on May 3 this year. Three days earlier than in 2025, when it occurred on May 6. From that day onward, Italy has been symbolically living on credit from the planet, having exhausted the water, energy, and natural resources that the Earth can regenerate in a full year.
An ecological debt that places Italy broadly in line with other European countries, though still lagging behind those with later Overshoot Days.
France reached its Overshoot Day earlier, on April 24. Germany (May 10), the United Kingdom (May 22), and Spain (June 4) follow — reflecting a comparatively greater ability to balance consumption with regeneration. Luxembourg, however, reached its Overshoot Day as early as February, while Qatar’s falls on February 4.
Globally, in the early 1970s, Overshoot Day fell in late December (December 25 in 1971). By 1990, it had already moved to mid-October.
Entering the phase of overexploitation
The data is compiled by the Global Footprint Network, an international research organisation that measures countries’ ecological footprints by comparing their natural resource consumption with the planet’s capacity to regenerate them.
For Italy, this means that in just over four months, the country has consumed what the Earth can regenerate in an entire year. From that point forward, demand exceeds supply — and the deficit accumulates.
This imbalance is not abstract. It materialises as environmental degradation, biodiversity loss, waste accumulation, greenhouse gas build-up, and land consumption.
The impact of our lifestyles
The numbers speak clearly: if every person on Earth adopted our consumption patterns, we would need about 2.7 planets to stay in balance.
This imbalance is not accidental — it is structural. It reflects production and consumption systems built on continuous growth, where demand routinely exceeds actual needs and efficiency gains are often offset by increased use.
“Much of the ‘natural’ capital upon which so much of human wellbeing and economic activity depends — water, land, the air and atmosphere, biodiversity and marine resources — continues its seemingly inexorable decline. The cost of inaction and the price humanity will eventually pay is likely to dwarf the cost of swift and decisive action now.” — Achim Steiner, former UNEP Executive Director
Move the date later in the year
The goal is simple: move the date later in the year.
But doing so requires more than a checklist of good intentions — it demands a shift in how systems are designed and how value is defined.
It means transitioning from linear to circular models, where waste is reduced at the source rather than managed downstream. It means rethinking energy, food, and mobility systems so that efficiency is not just technological, but cultural. And it means designing cities that reduce the need for consumption, not just optimise it.
And it also means confronting everyday habits — from what we buy to how we eat — recognising that individual choices, while limited on their own, become powerful when aligned with systemic change.
Even small shifts, when scaled, can move the date forward by days. Structural transformation can move it by months.
Final thoughts
Italy’s Overshoot Day is not meant to be observed — it is meant to be reversed.
Yet none of this is possible without acknowledging a harder truth: moving the date means moving our habits.
The same systems that built prosperity now threaten to undermine it.
But systems are not fixed. They can be redesigned.
The choice is ours: continue consuming as if tomorrow will never come, or recognise that every day moved later is a day earned back for future generations.
Overshoot Day in Italy arrived three days earlier this year. Next year, it could arrive later.
In essence, we need to ask: what kind of world do we want?
An update on labour exploitation, modern-day slavery and human rights
On May 1st, we celebrate labour. But it may be more honest to look at how that work exists.
Because in 2026, labour exploitation has not disappeared. It has become more complex, more fragmented — and easier to ignore.
The system hasn’t changed. It has scaled.
Investigations into global supply chains continue to confirm what is often treated as an exception: exploitation is not on the margins of production. It sits at its centre.
From garments to electronics, companies still achieve cost efficiency, in part, through pressure that travels down the chain — until it reaches those with the least power to resist it.
Labour — What the system depends on
Recent benchmarks by KnowTheChain, a project of the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, offer a useful lens.
Across industries, performance remains low. In the food and beverage sector, reports from Brazil’s coffee production describe working weeks stretching beyond legal limits, degrading living conditions, and cases of debt bondage. In technology manufacturing, only a handful of companies score above average — and none adequately respond to specific allegations of forced labour.
Even where policies exist, enforcement is inconsistent. And the model itself — particularly just-in-time production — continues to create conditions where abuse becomes more likely, not less.
The workers the system relies on most
Migrant labour sits at the core of many of these sectors: construction, agriculture, logistics, care.
And yet, it is also where vulnerability concentrates.
Many workers arrive already in debt, having paid high recruitment fees for jobs that do not match what was promised. Once employed, their position is often tied to temporary visas, employer sponsorship, or informal arrangements that make leaving difficult and speaking out risky.
What follows is not always visible, but it is consistent: wage theft, excessive hours, unsafe conditions, restricted movement.
Between 2022 and 2025, authorities and researchers have recorded thousands of cases globally, with agriculture and construction showing the highest concentration. Most involve violations that are not exceptional, but systemic — embedded in how labour is managed, priced, and controlled.
Workers are essential to the system. But remain structurally exposed within it.
Italy: luxury and labour exploitation, side by side
Closer to home, investigations between 2025 and 2026 have made this contradiction harder to ignore.
In subcontracted workshops supplying major luxury brands, authorities uncovered what they described as “heavy exploitation” of migrant workers — often underpaid, sometimes undocumented, producing goods sold at exponentially higher prices.
At the same time, some brand units have been placed under administration due to labour abuses, while others have cut large numbers of suppliers following violations.
These are not isolated incidents.
Prosecutors have pointed instead to a “generalised manufacturing method”— a system where responsibility fragments across layers of subcontracting, and where visibility fades as production moves further away from the brand.
Luxury, in this context, does not sit apart from exploitation. It can exist alongside it.
The pressure behind the product
Speed drives part of this dynamic. The rise of ultra-fast fashion has intensified cost pressure across supply chains, forcing suppliers into continuous price reductions and unstable production cycles. Those at the top transfer downward what they cannot absorb — through lower wages, longer hours, and compromised conditions.
This is not an unintended outcome. It is the economic logic of scale and acceleration.
Transparency, but on whose terms?
There are signs of movement.
The European Union is advancing toward stricter supply chain traceability, and some brands have begun mapping their networks more systematically. In Italy, a recent agreement introduced a voluntary system for suppliers to disclose labour conditions and obtain certification.
Transparency is still, in many cases, a choice — not an obligation. And beyond the first tier of suppliers, visibility remains limited. At the same time, new regulations are emerging globally. Investigations into forced labour are increasing, and legislative frameworks are slowly taking shape.
But the pace of regulation does not yet match the speed of production.
What remains unchanged
This creates a familiar contradiction. Even as sustainability becomes a dominant narrative, labour conditions often remain secondary:
supply chains extend beyond clear accountability
companies regularly outsource responsibility
“green” transitions risk, excluding the very workers they depend on
In fact, what is presented as progress does not always translate into protection.
What May 1st should remind us
In conclusion, labour exploitation today is not hidden because it is rare. It is hidden because it is structural.
It exists in subcontracting. In pricing models. In the distance—geographical and economic—between brands and workers.
And often, in the gap between what is communicated and what is practised.
On a day that celebrates workers, the question is not only how far we have come.
It is also: who remains invisible in the system we continue to participate in?