TGIM! A day off from Forest Bake. I got up pretty late specially during this rainy season, no surprise my body clock would automatically slow down to meet the Monday pace. It’s best to just stay cosy in bed, listening to the rain, what a beautiful moment of the day.
10:45am
What should I wear..?
Every time when it comes to a decision making of ‘what to wear’. I’d often go by the weather, or places I plan to visit. Since Monday is an easy for me, I’d rather go for something comfy with a style. So I picked out my Matter Prints dress.
11:45am
Late brunch at “Meena Rice Based Cuisine”. Finally I got myself there after hearing from friends and seen so many delicious posts on Instagram.
The restaurant located on an outer ring road of Chiang Mai, though not so far from the main city but peaceful enough for you to enjoy a good meal. The place was built from an old Northern Thai style houses, surrounded by trees beside a small pond. Everything was decorated in Thai hand-dyed fabrics, wood and ceramics. What a coincidence I happened to wear an artisanal hand printed shirt dress myself!
As new comers, we had no idea of what to order so they recommended us to try some signature Lanna (Northern Thai) dishes. The highlight was the coloured steamed rice cooked in different kind of herbs and flowers to get their wonderful natural dyes. Mind you all of the dishes were sprinkled with edible flower petals, beautiful!
3:30pm
Back home for an afternoon retreat in the garden. After rained walk is always the best. Loving how everything switched from lemony green to foresty green, the scent and the freshness in the air are just marvelous. In fact, I’m often here for a purpose, either to do some foraging or to get some inspirations, but for Mondays, I shall enjoy myself for nothing.
Our Carunda trees are bearing their fruits. These are edible, you can have them fresh like having strawberries or even bake them in one of your recipes, you choose :)
4:45pm
Looked like it’s about to rain for the third round, meaning, it’s time for me to stop wandering. I shall get back in and waiting patiently for mum’s best dinner..
The day was short but I did accomplish my slow-life kind of day with well received energy from nature.
Get to know @matterprints 🌿🌿🌿🌿🌿🌿🌿🌿 {REPOST} If we go by the rules of fashion, we're not supposed to tell you this. But we began with a commitment to transparency, and we want to continue that practice in our everyday. Our newest style was meant to be ready for International Women's Day, but it's a bit late. Here's why: • From pattern-cutting, dyeing, weaving, to sewing - there is a direct human involvement that goes into making your clothing. It's a lot of work and it takes time, especially if they're working fair hours. • The value of craft is in its making. The process of the fabric we work with takes time because it intersects with the serendipity of weather and weddings. • Consideration and intentionality in every step of the process has intangible ramifications to all involved, and adhering to natural seasons and a holistic view on production is simply, more human. Discover ethical brands via fashionotes.com 📲 . . . #dailyfashionotes #digitalfashion #latestfashionnews #ethicalfashion #instafashionblogger #style #fashion #minimilist #vegan #organic #sustainable #luxury #womensstyle #travel #matterprints
As a voice for conscious fashion, Raye Padit is motivated by the belief that one person’s actions, no matter how small, holds great impact. This core ideal has driven him to start his three passion projects: Connected Threads Asia, PeyaR, and Swapaholic. Raye co-heads Connected Threads Asia - a platform connecting fashion designers, manufacturers, suppliers, and consumers, to create a lasting conversation around the culture of sustainable fashion. He is also the face behind PeyaR, a design label with a focus on bespoke apparel made through upcycled pre-consumer textiles. He began Swapaholic, his most recent venture, for people to exchange their clothes and build their closet without adding to the waste of the fashion industry.
Raye cycles through a closet of 47 items, believes only in the bare necessities, and keeps a giant jar of coins because he hates carrying around change in his pockets. This minimalistic approach guides his everyday. His room is vibrantly cluttered, with posters from past concerts he’s been to, sketches of clothing he wants to design one day, and notes from friends. Everything tacked onto his pristine walls has a story behind it. Though it isn’t minimal, it has the same sentiment - everything he keeps matters to him, and it holds an irreplaceable significance.
How did Connected Threads come about?
When I started the Fashion Revolution events in Singapore, I soon realized that it lacked continuity. I wanted to create a platform for people to learn more about ethical fashion, that way even after the event ended people would still have a way to support the cause. This ambition led to Connected Threads - we wanted to explore the side of fashion beyond the surface of glamour and expression. To encourage consumer responsibility, we would host events and documentary screenings as a way of building a community beyond the aesthetics of clothing.
When I started the Fashion Revolution events in Singapore, I soon realized that it lacked continuity.
What were you doing before you started Connected Threads?
I worked in marketing, and I was happy with my job - but I always knew I wanted more. Growing up, my mum loved fashion and she would attend special events on occasion. Whenever this was the case, she would go through the lengthy process of finding inspiration from magazines, picking out fabrics, going to the seamstress to have it made - and I would be by her side through it all watching the magic unfold as an idea went from fabric to dress. At a young age, I already knew that I wanted to work with fashion, and so I began doing internships with local designers and eventually moved into the ethical fashion industry.
Tell us more about how you started your new online clothes-swap platform Swapaholic, and how that has evolved now.
Swapaholic was actually a result of Connected Threads. As Connected Threads grew I felt that an exchange of ideas was simply not enough, and I wanted to do something tangible to contribute to the movement. I began exchanging clothes with my close friends as a way to get new clothes. But I soon came to realize that on a larger scale, I was able to build my wardrobe without adding more waste to the fashion industry.
When we began, the biggest challenge was the stigma behind swapping clothes. Some people saw it as an exchange of hand me downs, even though every piece brought in is as good as new. Now, there’s a change in mindset towards clothes-swapping, and there’s a growing interest as people realize they can open up their options. What I’ve been doing now is small-scale events, but the bigger picture is to create an online platform by next year to make it more accessible.
I try to think beyond consuming and instead focus on how can I make an impact without adding to the waste.
How has your style evolved since you came into ethical fashion?
I think it is more accurate to say that my behaviour towards clothes has changed. I used to want only what looks good on me, but now that I’ve become more conscious of my environmental impact, I try to think beyond consuming and instead focus on how can I make an impact without adding to the waste. As a designer, I have the liberty to conceptualise my own designs. With the creativity and resourcefulness of this job, I am limitless with the limited resources.
Nowadays, I try to minimise the amount of clothes I have in my wardrobe. Because really, how often will I wear all these clothes when I always go back to the few pieces that I am most comfortable in?
What is your ideal closet?
Currently, I have a capsule closet. I was inspired by a movement in the States where people would rotate between 33 pieces of clothing every 3 months. In that timeframe, what you have is your staple and you don’t add to it. I decided to take that same idea but tailor it for my lifestyle. Instead of changing my closet every 3 months - I’ve changed it up so that I own only 50 pieces. Currently, I have 47 pieces, including my underwear and socks, and I feel like I already have my ideal closet.
I’ve curated set looks and uniforms for certain occasions, and it helps me focus on things that are more meaningful to me. The only thing I’m missing is a two-piece upcycled suit. But the nature of upcycled fabric makes it difficult to reconcile the pattern with a clean-cut shirt, and so I have yet to find a tailor willing to take on this project.
My high school chemistry teacher once told me that a person should always have two things on them at all times: a rosary and a handkerchief.
Is there a favourite piece in your closet that you always turn to?
I don’t have a favourite, but out of all the pieces I own it’s my uniform shirt that gets the most wear. I designed it myself, and it’s a staple in my closet. I prefer custom-made clothes, and a large portion of the garments I own reflect that. I also mirror this in all my designs - I refuse to make anything that has already been created, even if it was a past design of mine I still like to add extra details to make it unique.
I can’t say this is another favourite, perhaps more of an essential - something I always carry on me is a hanky. My high school chemistry teacher once told me that a person should always have two things on them at all times: a rosary and a handkerchief. It sort of became my rule to live by. As a kid, my mom would never buy me handkerchiefs no matter how much I asked her to, and so I ended up taking them from my dad’s collection. Now of course I get my own, I used to have a collection of 12 handkerchiefs but it’s dwindled down to 3 - it’s so easy to lose them!
Nowadays, I try to minimise the amount of clothes I have in my wardrobe. Because really, how often will I wear all these clothes when I always go back to the few pieces that I am most comfortable in?
What is the statement you wish to make with your clothes?
I always tell my clients “you should wear you.” Do not be blinded by mainstream messages. What works for others might not work for you and that’s okay, when you choose what works for you, it will empower you and make you feel confident.
When I design for my clients, I prefer to meet with them first to learn more about who they are, what they wear, and why they wear what they wear. There is no point to creating pieces that they will only wear once. I want to create pieces that fit their lifestyle, and I want it to be timeless.
Out of all your designs, which are your favourite works?
It’s a tie between two dresses. There’s a silver dress I made out of boredom, which I love because there’s so much complexity that went into designing it in detail, and yet it drapes so effortlessly. The other dress is a wedding gown I made for a client, her fiancé had recently passed on but she wanted a dress anyways to keep as a memory of him and what they shared.
Final question. If your house is on fire, what are five things you would save, even if it means running back into a burning house?
My passport, my laptop, all my clothes (it’s all or nothing,) my sewing machine, and books.
We began with the intention to inspire consciousness in our everyday, to cultivate a culture that encourages others to uncover where and why something is made. The Connected Clothing series spotlights on different individuals in the fashion industry - why they wear what they wear and the significance behind their choices.
We began with the intention to inspire consciousness in our everyday, to cultivate a culture that encourages others to uncover where and why something is made. It is our belief that the products we create are built on stories that connect the wearers to the makers. There is a history behind the textiles used, prints woven, styles designed - and intention in it all.
Connected Clothing spotlights on different individuals in the fashion industry - why they wear what they wear and the significance behind their choices. Throughout this series, we’ll be featuring Raye Padit, Stephanie Dickson, Rosalina Ma, Jennifer Nini, and Andrew Yeung.
From the co-founder of Connected Threads Asia who has a capsule wardrobe of 47 items, to a designer in Hong Kong who curates her four closets based on old glamour vintage pieces - read the series on our journal here.
With everything going on in the world today, it’s a pulsing reminder that there is still a lot of room for change and progress, especially for women. But celebration coexists with struggle and now, more than ever, we want to celebrate the remarkable resilience of women, individuals who find the strength and passion to go on despite their circumstances.
Sonica Sarna is the founder of Sonica Sarna Design, an ethical design production agency that engages artisans to create fashion products for global brands and designers. As an apparel and accessories designer based in India, we work closely with her to produce our garments.
She wrote to us about Project Thrive, an initiative she started in India to recruit at-risk women from local slum clusters and enrol them in a 45 day paid sewing training program.
“I want to create value with my life by offering opportunities for those who have no voice.”
Many of the women have fought severe trauma and resistance in their homes to come out and fight for a right to work so they could earn wages for their daughter’s education. With Project Thrive, Sonica is looking to provide them a skill that would create employment options in the long run.
For Sonica, the motivation behind Project Thrive is “The call to justice. I want to create value with my life by offering opportunities for those who have no voice. I want to be remembered as someone who did the right thing and lived with happiness and love.”
“I want to be remembered as an independent woman who earned her own income, is not dependant on anyone else, is safe, and has a tension free life.”
Sunita Saini is responsible for the sewing and hand embroidery work at Project Thrive. Before this, she took on contract jobs for garment thread cutting, then underwent training to learn how to sew. As a mother of three, working for her is a financial necessity. She sees it as a means of provision for her children; to be able to set meals on the table, send them all to school, and give them what they need without hesitance. As a woman, being a part of Project Thrive is an open door to what she sees to be her independence.
When we asked Sunita what legacy she wanted to leave with the life she’s living, she shared “I want to be remembered as an independent woman who earned her own income, is not dependant on anyone else, is safe, and has a tension free life.”
Sangeeta currently focuses her training on garment cutting and measurement checking. Her journey to this point of her life is one of toil and hardship. At the age of 14, she was married off and since had 6 children. Yet before she could fully adjust to her identity as a mother, 3 of them passed away as she was too young to bear them.
Having live the life with the lot she’s been given, she didn’t want the same story for her daughter.
When Sangeeta learned of Project Thrive, she fought with her in-laws and husband to enrol in the program. They were all against her leaving the house to work, and didn’t find any value in her intentions - but she went ahead anyways. For her, being a part of the program was an opportunity to earn the wages to pay for her daughter’s place in school. Having live the life with the lot she’s been given, she didn’t want the same story for her daughter. By providing her daughter with an education, Sangeeta hopes that the narrative of tribulation is one that ends with her generation.
The fight for gender equality, after centuries of boundary-breaking, is still ongoing and it is the remarkable resilience of women that keeps the progress strong.
In a culture where financial stability is often interrelated with freedom of choice, Project Thrive seeks to give voice and independence to those unable to have either. Through Sonica’s intentions, Sunita’s perseverance, and Sangeeta’s determination, we are reminded that the fight for gender equality, after centuries of boundary-breaking, is still ongoing and it is the remarkable resilience of women that keeps the progress strong.
Tell us about a female figure in your life (and not your mom, because we all know they hold a special place in our hearts) that embodies remarkable resilience at [email protected]
These bright, dual color reversible pouches are completely unisex with bold de- tachable tassels. The pouches can be turned inside out to suit whichever mood you’re in.
Made from off-cut 100% cotton textiles which are hand and yarn dyed in small batches by our Ikat artisans in Pochampally, the reversible pouch features the Akimbo print, also used in The Modern Monpe + Akimbo, and Cave 17 print, also used in The Easy Dhoti + Cave 17.