!!exclusive!! - Maison Chichigami
Hattori, whose family survived the decline of the Japanese silk industry, had spent 20 years developing a proprietary method of twisting and laminating kozo fibers without breaking their crystalline structure. The breakthrough came when they discovered that by hydrating the twisted kozo thread and weaving it on a specific tension (1.7 newtons—a number now sacred to the brand), the resulting fabric mimicked the hand of a heavy crepe while retaining the acoustic and tactile properties of vellum.
Clients do not buy a shirt or a jacket. They buy a —a rectangular, uncut piece of Kami-Ito fabric. Upon purchase (which requires a video consultation regarding the client’s climate and movement habits), the owner sends the Matrix to one of seven "Scriers" (tailors certified by the house). The Scrier cuts the fabric, but crucially, they leave a 3cm "memory border" around every seam. maison chichigami
The silhouettes are deliberately oversized, not for fashion, but for the "future volume" required for re-cutting. A size 2 jacket has the same shoulder width as a size 6, because the wearer is expected to grow into the looser cut after Metamorphosis. Hattori, whose family survived the decline of the
The result is (Paper Thread)—a material that crinkles like a letter when you crush it, but returns to its shape without a single crease. When held to light, it reveals a watermark-like grain unique to every bolt. The "Living Wardrobe" Philosophy Maison Chichigami rejects the seasonal "drop" model. They produce exactly 200 meters of fabric per month . That is the limit of Hattori’s loom. Consequently, garments are not "released"; they are converted . They buy a —a rectangular, uncut piece of Kami-Ito fabric
This exclusivity is not artificial scarcity; it is literal scarcity. The kozo bushes are grown on a single hectare in Shikoku, tended to by the same family since 1923. The water used to twist the fibers is drawn from a specific spring with a pH of 6.8. If that spring dries up, Maison Chichigami ceases to exist. Vogue called their 2024 exhibition at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris "a requiem for fast fashion." However, critics argue that the brand is merely an art project for the 0.1%, a fetishization of labor that ignores the reality that most people cannot afford a "slow" wardrobe.