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NEWCOMMON

Material

The Linen Edit

Linen is a natural fiber spun from the stalks of the flax plant, woven into a fabric that reads cooler on the body than cotton because of how loosely and unevenly its fibers pack together. It creases easily and holds a soft, matte hand that gets noticeably softer with every wash, which is part of why linen is worn hardest in the months it is needed most, not stored for a single occasion. The visible crease and slight texture are structural to the fiber, not a defect in the weave. Linen has been worked into cloth for thousands of years, among the oldest textile fibers still in everyday use.

1,791 pieces · 20 ateliers · 3 adjacent Edits

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