Why We Reclaim
Reclaimed. Redefined.
For me, those words are not branding language. They are personal.
Every collection I create is not just a release of garments. It is a return. A remembering. A refining.
When I reclaim a discarded textile, I am often reclaiming a piece of myself. A part of my story. A layer of growth. A lesson I had to live before I could sew it into something new.
Reclaiming is spiritual work.
It is the decision to believe that what looks overlooked is still valuable. That what feels unfinished is still purposeful. That what has been set aside is not discarded by God.
Each drop is an opportunity.
An opportunity to learn a new skill.
To master a new technique.
To stretch beyond what feels comfortable.
To sit quietly in the studio and listen.
Design, for me, is not noise. It is prayer in motion.
There are moments when I am deconstructing denim or cutting a vintage cloth, and I sense that I am being shaped as much as the garment is. The discipline of craft builds patience. The problem-solving builds resilience. The risk builds faith.
Reworking textiles mirrors what God continually does in us.
Nothing wasted.
Nothing overlooked.
Everything capable of transformation.
As the brand grows, I do not want growth for visibility alone. I want growth that creates access. Growth that opens doors. Growth that allows others to reclaim and redefine their own stories — whether through craft, employment, education, or simply wearing something that reminds them of their strength.
Small batch. Local. Intentional.
Not because it sounds good — but because it reflects how I want to live.
To reclaim is to return to purpose.
To redefine is to step fully into it.
RECLAIMED. REDEFINED.