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One piece, one story: The Floral Taffeta Pull by Ujoh

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Where the utility of a garment meets the poetry of flowers—for those who find strength in softness


The Floral Taffeta Pull by the Japanese designer duo 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, expression of good design. Slow fashion made to last.

The Floral Taffeta Pull is not merely worn; it is contemplated. It is the bold, expressive stroke in a considered wardrobe—the piece that commands attention while inviting intimacy. In its crisp, graphic print, it offers a narrative of resilient blooms, while the blouson shape and utilitarian details provide a deliberate, architectural counterpoint. A modern armour for daily life.

It evokes the dynamic tension of some Gustav Klimt paintings—where intricate, natural motifs clash and merge with bold, geometric fields of colour. The flowers are the ornate, symbolic language; the clean, oversized silhouette is the structured ground. It is a wearable canvas, where delicate life bursts forth from a foundation of modern form.

Sky blue—not a mere flat hue, but a luminous, expansive tone that holds the light of a clear morning. This tranquil base gives the graphic blooms their startling vividness, a quiet harmony of calm and vitality.

The Floral Taffeta Pull by Ujoh, hanging on a minimal metallic hanger. It is styled against a grey wall with green leaves to the right and a white armchair to the left.

The anatomy of a statement

• The fabric: A sleek polyester taffeta, a testament to innovation. This is the secret to its spirit. The front presents a crisp, luminous canvas for the art, while the knit back offers a plush, breathable contrast. It is a dialogue between the graphic and the tactile.
• The print: The abstract tulips and daffodils. This is not mere decoration, but a declaration. Flowers known for pushing through the cold earth, they symbolise a vitality that is both delicate and fierce—a perfect metaphor for modern resilience.
• The make: Made in Japan. This is a promise. It speaks of studios where precision is an art form. Where the oversized, blouson inspired volume is expertly calculated, and where details like the side slits and elasticated cuffs are executed with flawless intention.

The Floral Taffeta Pull: Wear it as your modern armour


This is a piece that provides the artistic confidence to stand apart. It understands that the most compelling stories are often told in a single, powerful image.

• For the creative day: Paired with minimalist wide-leg trousers and leather loafers. The uniform for imaginative work.
• For the urban landscape: Layered over a sleek turtleneck with tailored leggings and heavy boots. A dialogue between art and architecture.
• For the evening’s gathering: Worn over a flowing silk dress and delicate jewellery. Unapologetically sophisticated.

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 Floral Taffeta Pull – Ujoh
Limited edition. Like a sonnet—meant to be felt and interpreted.

🖤 To inquire: DM  @suite123 | WhatsApp | Email

Available by appointment for shopping in Milano or worldwide—from screen to doorstep. From our hands to your story.

P.S. Ask us how to style this as the centerpiece of your wardrobe, from layering it over crisp shirts to pairing it with raw denim or sleek technical trousers. We are here for the conversations, not just the transactions.

Footnotes: The bimaterial construction is a lesson in harmonious contrast. It reminds us that true modernism lies in the fusion of opposites—the rigid and the soft, the artistic and the utilitarian. 
Here, the polyester taffeta is not a compromise but a choice—selected for its crispness and ability to hold a vibrant graphic, a function that natural fibers cannot replicate. It’s a reminder that a strategic, considered use of material is the true mark of a conscious garment.

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One piece, one story: The Double-Layered Silk Top by Marc Le Bihan

Reading Time: 3 minutes

A whisper of effortless refinement that transcends seasons—for the collectors of meaning


The Double-Layered Silk Top isn’t merely worn; it inhabits the body like a second skin. Marc Le Bihan’s design philosophy—where couture meets the ease of a lived-in favourite—culminates in this piece. Imagine the quiet intensity of an Agnes Martin painting: minimalism that reveals its depth only upon closer inspection.

Olive—not the predictable khaki of utility, but the complex green-gold of ancient olive wood, polished by time. A colour that refuses to be categorised.

A woman leans against a sun-washed stucco wall in an unnamed Mediterranean village. She wears the Double Silk Top, its crinkled texture rippling like water under twilight. The round neckline frames collarbones; the V-back hints at undone elegance. The asymmetric hem dances with her movement. Not flounce, but fluid arithmetic. Paired with nothing but ivory linen trousers and salt-bleached sandals, she embodies the art of less as more

The silence around her feels deliberate.

A brunette woman of color stands on a street, wearing the double silk top by Marc Le Bihan layered over a framboise (raspberry) silk dress. She pairs the look with sleek black leather slippers. Behind her, grey and brick walls frame the scene, with a tree’ visible at the bottom edge.

The alchemy of a couture soul: not spring, not summer—but forever silk


Cut from hand-dyed pongé silk, this top celebrates the poetry of human touch:

  • Structure and fluidity: Tailored to skim the body, yet its double layer lends weightless dimension.
  • Precision and spontaneity: The handkerchief hem swings with a dancer’s cadence. The crinkles? Pressed by human hands, not machines—they’re textural annotations, softening with wear like a beloved book’s spine.
  • Olive’s quiet drama: Neither loud nor shy, it’s the hue of tarnished Venetian mirrors. Sun-bleached herbarium specimens. The patina on a sculptor’s bronze tools.

The Double-Layered Silk Top: Wear it like you’ve always owned it


This isn’t a top meant to be styled—it’s meant to be lived in. A style note: The crinkles soften with time. Let them. This is a piece that grows more beautiful with wear, like a handwritten poem tucked into a coat pocket. 

  • For the unscripted afternoon: Tucked into high-waisted wool crepe pants, a single heirloom ring as punctuation.
  • For the clandestine dinner: Layer under a slouchy blazer, sleeves pushed up, hem untucked over cigarette trousers. Add a tarnished silver thumb ring. Carelessness, for the candelight.
  • For the everyday sublime: Over faded jeans, as if you’ve always dressed this way, and always will.

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 Double-Layered Silk Top
Limited edition. Like a diary page—meant to be lived in.

🖤 Reserve yours: DM @suite123 | WhatsApp | e.mail

Available by appointment for shopping in Milano or worldwide—from screen to doorstep. From our hands to your story.

P.S. Ask us about the hand-dyeing process or how to pair it with your most battered jeans. We’re here for the stories, not just the sale.

Footnotes: The olive hue shifts subtly under different lights—sometimes moss, sometimes smoke. This is not inconsistency; it’s aliveness.

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One piece, one story: The Handmade Fabric Trousers by Miaoran

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Contemporary style: Wide-leg silhouettes, woven by hand—where texture meets quiet rebellion


The Handmade Fabric Trousers by Miaoran aren’t just trousers—they’re a testament to the poetry of craftsmanship. Woven on a loom using raw cotton yarns of varying thicknesses, each pair carries the rhythm of the artisan’s hands. The orthogonal weave structure creates a fabric alive with tactile depth, like parchment pulled from a long-forgotten sketchbook.

For those who dress in whispers, not shouts—who crave pieces that age like well-loved paperbacks, softening with every wear.

Close-up on a woman’s lower body against a grey background, wearing The Handmade Fabric Trousers by Miaoran in oatmeal with subtle black veining. The trousers feature a single front pleat, a front zip with contrasting white button, and a layered, textured finish that emphasizes craftsmanship. The slightly cropped waistline highlights the trousers’ high-rise silhouette.

Loom-made fabric: The quiet code of craft


True craftsmanship takes time. Slow down to appreciate it.

• The fabric: Handwoven in Italy, the orthogonal weave gives the cloth a subtle dimensionality. Uneven, organic, like the grain of weathered wood. Raw yarns of varying thicknesses create a surface that catches light and shadow differently with each step.
• The pleat & pocket: A single front pleat folds like an origami secret, concealing a side pocket—functional yet fluid. No bulk, just intention.
• The fastening: A front zip with a contrasting white button (a punctuation mark against the oatmeal canvas). Unlined, with seams finished in soft binding. Because beauty lives in the details unseen.
• The colour: Oatmeal with black veining—not plain, but layered. Like the pages of a coffee-stained novel or the cracks in desert clay.

The Handmade Fabric Trousers: Wear them like a well-loved manuscript


For the traveller who pairs them with a sun-bleached tee, the black veining echoing ink smudges in a passport.

Style them for—
• The studio day: Cuffed above bare feet, paired with a slub-knit tank, the fabric’s texture mirroring unfinished canvases.
• The twilight market: Tucked into weathered boots, a slouchy wool blazer shrugging off the evening chill.
• The slow Sunday: Belted with frayed silk, the orthogonal weave catching the light like rice paper screens.

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 Handmade Fabric Trousers
Limited edition. Like a diary page—meant to be lived in.

🖤 Reserve yours: DM @suite123 | WhatsApp | e.mail

Available by appointment for shopping in Milano or worldwide—from screen to doorstep. From our hands to your story.

P.S. Ask about the weaver’s hands. (They remember every thread.)

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Clothes for the right people: For those who dress differently

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Niche fashion—where values, vision, and uncompromising taste intersect


Clothes for the right people. Clothes for those who understand them—for the discerning few who don’t need a supermarket crammed with garments but appreciate a curated selection: only what makes sense.

But let’s be honest: we’ll never get rich. Not because we lack talent, vision, or hard work, but because we care about where our pieces end up—whose hands they land in.

An acquaintance told us, “You’re not niche; you’re extremely niche.”
He was right.

Who is it for, really?


We don’t curate for everyone. We curate for those who feel the intention in each piece—who notice the cut, the fabric, the care in construction. For people who see clothes not as disposable trends but as lasting companions. Garments crafted for modern humans, defined by values.

We stand against mass production and instant gratification. We stand against the culture of excess and the obsession with more. No dopamine culture here—just slow fashion and meaningful garments. 
What we offer isn’t merely something to wear; it’s something to connect with.

Clothes for the right people means guiding each piece toward the hands that will cherish it. People who value quality over quantity. People who choose slowly and dress consciously. Because sustainability is a lifestyle: a deliberate way of living.

That may mean slower growth, fewer sales, no overnight success—and we’re fine with that. Our goal isn’t to clothe everyone; it’s to connect with those who truly see.

🖤 If that’s you, welcome. You’re exactly who we’re here for.

💌 Join our newsletter – no noise, just meaning.
The subscription box is at the bottom on mobile, or on the left on desktop.

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Vintage fabrics: The future of fashion lies in the past

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Sustainable fashion starts here: Timeless style from a hidden archive


There’s something undeniably special about vintage fabrics—the way they drape, the weight of them in your hands, the subtle textures that whisper of another era. These fabrics were made to endure, crafted with care feels almost unreal in today’s fast fashion landscape.

Our love for them runs deep, and it all began with our mother. She wasn’t just a seamstress; she was an artist, stitching magic into every garment. The kind of woman who hand-finished buttonholes because anything less wouldn’t do. Growing up, our world was filled with treasures—jars of buttons, spools of thread, and stacks of fabric waiting for their second act. Even our school bags and pencil cases were reborn from deadstock denim, transformed by her hands into something both practical and extraordinary.

Vintage fabrics: A discovery that changed everything


Recently, while rummaging through an old closet, we stumbled upon a trove of forgotten beauty: vintage fabrics, carefully preserved over the years. Our mother, always a visionary, had tucked them away—some for their unmatched quality, others because they simply spoke to her. These weren’t just textiles; they were fragments of history, pieces of a time when craftsmanship wasn’t an afterthought.

And that’s when it hit us: the future of fashion isn’t about what’s next—it’s about what’s already been done. In a world obsessed with churning out disposable trends, these fabrics are a rebellion. They carry stories in their fibres, proof that clothing can—and should—last.

Weaving the past into the present


Now, we’re taking these forgotten gems and reimagining them with a modern eye in one-of-a-kind garments. Each stitch is a bridge between then and now, a way to honour the past while crafting something entirely new. This isn’t just upcycling—it’s an act of resistance, a quiet revolution. Because sustainable fashion doesn’t start with a label or a hashtag—it starts here, in the quiet magic of a hidden archive, in the belief that the most extraordinary styles are the ones that never go out of fashion.

So here’s to the fabrics that started it all, and to the hands that taught us their worth. The future of fashion isn’t in endless newness. It’s in the quiet art of making less from more, in stitching new stories into forgotten cloth.

Each piece is a one-of-a-kind story waiting to be worn.
🖤 Curious to wear yours? DM @suite123 | WhatsApp | e.mail

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