Textiles have accompanied everyday life for centuries. They appear on the table and throughout the home, within the simplest gestures.…
Textiles have accompanied everyday life for centuries. They appear on the table and throughout the home, within the simplest gestures. They carry hours of work and an intimate relationship with time. They become part of memory, of what is used, washed, and placed again. A tablecloth, a placemat, or a linen napkin are not merely surfaces, they are part of the scene. They receive the plate, the glass, the food, the resting hand. In many traditions, textile making is a craft passed down through generations, a slow practice shaped by care, patience, and repetition. Stitches, edges, lacework, imperfect hems. Small details that reveal the work of the body. At Regiment of Love, textiles are understood as sensitive layers that transform the table and the space. They do not seek perfection or rigidity, but a lived, everyday beauty that becomes more interesting with use and over time.