Slowness
We make a few good things a year, not many. Our cloths take time to weave; our patterns, time to draft.
Voyager began with a simple question — what would clothes look like if we made them slowly, deliberately, with care for every detail and a clear sense of purpose. The answer became a small house, the studio, and the way we work today.
The house was founded in 2026 by a small group of makers — tailors, weavers, designers — who wanted to build something they would still be proud of in twenty years. We started with a single rule: make a few good things, not many.
Each collection is cut for the season ahead — fine cloth for warm mornings, considered wool for long evenings, soft knitwear for the quieter months. Considered luxury, made for a life in motion.
Every piece begins as a sketch on butcher paper in the studio, is patterned there, and is hand-finished by makers we have worked with for years. We are slow. We are deliberate. We are, above all, a small house — and we intend to stay that way.
The House of Abbara — a considered house voyaging the Mediterranean since MMXXVI.
We make a few good things a year, not many. Our cloths take time to weave; our patterns, time to draft.
Wool from the mill, silk and linen from suppliers we have known for years, cashmere from the highlands. We name our makers because we trust them.
We will mend every Abbara garment for as long as it lasts. Stitches, buttons, hems — all complimentary.
Each piece is cut and sewn in our small studio. The studio is the long view — slow, deliberate, every season a new chapter.
Twelve hands, one floor, in our small studio.
Three people who started with a sketch on butcher paper, in 2025.
Twenty years cutting tailoring. Returned to teach the craft to the next generation.
A designer who studies proportion the way an architect reads a blueprint.
Trained in textiles; obsessed with cloth, indigo and the colour of dawn.
The studio is open to visitors on Saturday mornings, by appointment. Coffee, swatches, and a slow look around the workroom.