
The Carve
Native cedar is dried for a year, then drawn upon and carved over weeks. Geometric patterns are scored in by eye, never by machine.
For four generations, our families have shaped wood and leather in the same way — slowly, by hand, with respect for the material.
In a quiet atelier outside Fez, a carver scores cedar with a chisel worn smooth by his grandfather's grip. Across the courtyard, a tanner softens hides with oak bark and time. Nothing is rushed. Nothing is automated. The mark of the maker is the proof of the piece.

Native cedar is dried for a year, then drawn upon and carved over weeks. Geometric patterns are scored in by eye, never by machine.

Vegetable-tanned hides are hand-cut, edge-burnished, and saddle-stitched with waxed linen — a slower seam that lasts a lifetime.