An oversized khadi shirt built on 190 GSM pure cotton — raw in texture, ecru in tone, carrying the natural slub and breath of hand-spun fabric that no mill can replicate. The surface is interrupted. Panels of 200 GSM block-printed khadi are laid beneath the base fabric, cut through, and allowed to emerge — irregular, organic, unresolved. Each patch reads like a fragment of something older: earthy browns, deep sepias, motifs that sit somewhere between cartography and coral. No two placements identical. No two shirts the same. Around every aperture, hand-done running stitches in dark reddish-brown anchor thread trace the edge — securing the patch while turning each seam into a mark. The stitching runs the full length of the placket and along the collar stand, adding a deliberate hand-craft signature to every axis of the garment. At the left chest, FARDA in embroidery. At the back yoke, the Eye of Farda sigil. Natural-tone buttons complete the closure — understated hardware on a shirt that needs none. Boxy silhouette. Short sleeve. Every piece hand-finished, meaning every piece differs.
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