For Pre-Order only! Check below for full details and discounts.

The classic Stamp Collection Print is here in denim! Meet your coolest jeans ever. Wide enough to invoke some 90s nostalgia while still being fitted throughout for a put-together silhouette. 

Fit Notes:

  • Models are wearing size S
  • Fits true to size; little stretch, so size up if you're in between.
  • High-waisted with a wide leg
  • Rise: 12.5"
  • Inseam: 28"

Content + Care:

  • 100% cotton
  • Made Fair-Trade in India
  • Wash inside out, cold water, delicate cycle. Air dry.

Pre-Order and Save!

Receive a discount as a thank you for pre-ordering!

Early Bird Pricing, from May 23rd to June 23rd: $128 (30% off)

Mid-Phase Pricing, from June 24th until August 15th: $155

(15% Off)

Once in stock (estimated to arrive mid-August): $182 (full price)

 

About the Stamp Collection

Inspired by my late father's childhood stamp collection.

Last summer, I had the difficult task of going through my dad's belongings after he died to decide what to keep and sell. I thought I was going to pass out from sadness when I suddenly came upon his stamp collection. I had only seen it once, when I was a kid myself and he had proudly showed it to me, but it had since been kept somewhere in storage, a bit forgotten.

As a boy in the 1960s and early 1970s, he lived in Tehran, Iran. He carefully saved all the fun and colorful stamps that passed through his family's home when the mail arrived and organized them in little books, the same exact ones I used to make this fabric. The stamps themselves are beautifully painted and tell the story of life in Iran before the 1979 Revolution. Evocative of a different world, a different Iran, seeing them instantly takes one to the past. I wanted to memorialize the stamps and the care my dad had taken as a little boy to preserve these art pieces. Wishing I could share my idea with my dad, I digitally scanned my favorite ones, assembled them into a collage, printed it onto fabric, and here we are!

An homage to my father, to the proudly colorful and creative Iran of the past, and to all of us in these modern times who continue to wear our cultural identity on our sleeves (literally!).