The Shop has been a family-run business since 1969, rooted in the awakening of traditional Indian craft and a deep reverence for the handmade. Guided by indigenous textiles and a contemporary sensibility, they create products that are bright, considered, and full of story.
Their approach to upcycling is woven into everything they do — transforming fabric waste and remnant prints into new life, finding beauty in what might otherwise be lost, and treading gently on the earth in the process.
Tomorrows and The Shop share a belief that good design and conscious making are inseparable — this ongoing collaboration brings together two studios united by craft, circularity, and a quiet commitment to doing things differently.
The Shop has been a family-run business since 1969, rooted in the awakening of traditional Indian craft and a deep reverence for the handmade. Guided by indigenous textiles and a contemporary sensibility, they create products that are bright, considered, and full of story.
Their approach to upcycling is woven into everything they do — transforming fabric waste and remnant prints into new life, finding beauty in what might otherwise be lost, and treading gently on the earth in the process.
Tomorrows and The Shop share a belief that good design and conscious making are inseparable — this ongoing collaboration brings together two studios united by craft, circularity, and a quiet commitment to doing things differently.
Kantha is an ancient embroidery tradition originating in rural Bengal (present-day Bangladesh and West Bengal, India). A running stitch, deceptively simple, worked in parallel lines across layered cloth to bind and quilt. It is a way of giving new purpose to worn saris, stitching them into something whole again.
The stitch itself creates a gentle ripple across the surface, both structural and expressive. Each throw carries this lineage — slow, meditative work that transforms discarded fabric into something that will last for decades.
Kantha is an ancient embroidery tradition originating in rural Bengal (present-day Bangladesh and West Bengal, India). A running stitch, deceptively simple, worked in parallel lines across layered cloth to bind and quilt. It is a way of giving new purpose to worn saris, stitching them into something whole again.
The stitch itself creates a gentle ripple across the surface, both structural and expressive. Each throw carries this lineage — slow, meditative work that transforms discarded fabric into something that will last for decades.