Inside the Katunayake Atelier
By OVER Editorial — The Journal
There's a common assumption that 'made in Sri Lanka' means made anonymously — one factory among hundreds, producing for logos that will never visit. We wanted the opposite: one atelier, our name on the door, every stage under one roof.
The morning starts in the cutting room. Fabric rests for 24 hours after delivery — cloth, like people, travels badly — before patterns are laid digitally and cut in small batches of thirty to fifty pieces.
Sewing happens in cells, not lines. One team owns a garment from first seam to final press, which means accountability is personal and improvements come from the floor, not a memo.
Quality control is deliberately unglamorous: every single garment is measured at nine points, tugged at every bar-tack, and steamed before it's bagged. Roughly four percent don't make it out. They're repaired and donated, never landfilled.
The atelier is open to customers by appointment — the Stores page has details. Come see where it happens.