About the brand

The label began with a question Pedro Trindade had been asking since growing up in Brazil: what does menswear inherit? The uniform, the suit, the hero — these became the subject of his MA at Central Saint Martins, where the work first took shape as an examination of masculinity and how the body wears it.


What followed the MA was two years of development — patterning, sampling, fitting and refitting a single set of essential pieces, tested on different bodies and brought back to the table until the cuts held what they were meant to. The aim was a wardrobe rather than a collection — clothing built once, well, to last.


Out of that work came the language the studio uses now: tailoring and proportion taken from menswear, draping and the shaping of the body brought in from womenswear, reassembled by a Brazilian eye trained in London.


What started as menswear has, over time, moved across. The same patterning and the same care now arrive on women as readily as on men, and womenswear is increasingly the place the work is heading. The clothes haven’t changed. The wearer has broadened.