Our Story
India made this.
We just remembered.
Every thread carries a memory. Every weave holds a prayer. This is the story of khadi—and the hands that keep it alive.
Our Story
Every thread carries a memory. Every weave holds a prayer. This is the story of khadi—and the hands that keep it alive.
Greek for "home." Not a place on a map. Not four walls and a roof. Home as a feeling. The clothes you reach for without thinking. The fabrics that know your skin. The pieces that move when you move.
That's what we make. Clothes that feel like home.
We're bringing it back.Khadi is India's oldest craft—hand-spun, hand-woven cotton that predates machines, factories, mass production. For generations, it sustained entire villages. Weavers passed down techniques through families like heirlooms.
Then the mills came. Cheaper, faster, louder. Khadi became "old-fashioned." Weavers left their looms. The craft started disappearing.
But here's what they didn't tell you about khadi:It breathes like nothing else.It softens with every wash. It lasts for decades. It employs rural communities. It uses zero electricity. It stores carbon. It's not "slow fashion" because it's nostalgic—it's slow because it'sright.
Every EcoThreads piece is hand-spun, hand-woven, hand-finished by artisans who've carried this craft through generations.
No factories. No machines. Just hands, skill, and time.
We work directly with weaving collectives in Gujarat, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Odisha, and Uttar Pradesh. Every artisan is paid fair wages—not industry minimum, but living wages. They own their looms. They set their hours. They decide what to make.
When you buy from EcoThreads, you know exactly who made your clothes. Their name. Their village. Their story. Because craft without dignity is just production.
The fashion industry produces 10% of global carbon emissions. More than aviation and shipping combined. Synthetic fabrics shed microplastics into our water. Garment workers earn poverty wages. Clothes are designed to fall apart.
Khadi is the opposite of all of that.
Hand-spinning and hand-weaving use human power—not fossil fuels. Natural fibers biodegrade. Artisans control their work. And because khadi is made slowly, it's built to last.
You don't need a new wardrobe every season. You need a few pieces that work. That last. That get better with time.
More than fabric. A movement.
Every thread spun and woven by hand. No machines. No shortcuts. Just craft.
Direct partnerships with rural weavers. Fair wages. Sustained livelihoods.
Pure, natural materials only. Khadi, linen, cotton. Nothing else.
Not for a season. For years. Pieces that get better with time.
The makers
Every piece tells a story. Here are some of the hands behind your clothes.
Laxmi learned to spin khadi from her grandmother when she was just seven years old. Now, she leads a collective of 23 women artisans in rural Gujarat....
Jaipur, Rajasthan · 35 years of experience
Rekha's family has been natural dyers for four generations. Using indigo, pomegranate, and turmeric from their own garden, she creates colors that tel...
Salem, Tamil Nadu · 45 years of experience
Ramesh and his three sons run a handloom workshop in Tamil Nadu. Their pit looms are over 60 years old—older than Ramesh himself. "These looms saw my ...