About us
About Tinctoria
Tinctoria is a sustainable slow fashion brand that celebrates nature, traditional craftsmanship, and conscious living.
The brand works with natural dyes, eco printing, pen kalamkari, and block printing to create beautiful fabrics that are completely biodegradable and environmentally responsible.
Tinctoria believes in zero-waste practices, ensuring that every stage of the process respects the planet. The fabrics used are hand-spun and hand-woven, which supports farmers who grow natural fibers and the skilled weavers who transform them into textiles.
By collaborating with artisans and traditional craft communities, Tinctoria helps preserve age-old textile techniques while providing meaningful livelihoods. From the farmer who grows the fiber to the artisan who prints and finishes the fabric, every piece carries the touch of many hands.
Through mindful production and slow fashion values, Tinctoria creates clothing that is not only beautiful but also ethical, sustainable, and connected to the people and nature behind it.
About the Founder
I am a fashion designer who began my journey freelancing for weddings, creating custom outfits for special moments in people’s lives. Like many designers, I used to buy a little extra fabric for every order to ensure perfection. Over time, those extra pieces began piling up in my studio.
Most of them were synthetic fabrics materials that go out of trend quickly and rarely get reused. One day, I looked at that growing pile and realized something uncomfortable: the work I loved was also contributing to environmental waste.
That moment changed my perspective.
I decided that fashion should not only celebrate beauty but also respect the planet. I began shifting my designs toward biodegradable fabrics and natural dyes, choosing materials that return to the earth instead of harming it.
Today, my work is about creating garments that are meaningful, responsible, and timeless—pieces that tell a story not just of style, but of sustainability.
Because fashion should not cost the Earth.