Before embroidery, there was paper.
Each hydrangea began as a hand-painted watercolor — soft layers of blue and green slowly building shape and movement.
What started as pigment would later become thread on linen.
The hydrangeas were not digitally designed.
They were painted by hand.
Watercolor allows imperfection.
Edges blur. Colors bleed into one another.
That softness became essential to the Hydrangea collection — a slow fashion process where art leads the garment.
Once the watercolor was finalized, it moved from paper to linen.
Natural linen was selected for its Mediterranean character — breathable, textured, timeless.
Made in Barcelona, each garment carries the transition from art to craftsmanship.
What began in a small studio became part of a larger process shaped by women, fabric, and patience.

