Morii Design hero

OUR STORY

Morii Design

Morii began with Brinda, a textile designer who found her direction while working with artisans in New Delhi. At the Asian Heritage Foundation, she worked closely with Sujni artisans from Bihar, learning the depth of their traditions. She saw both the beauty of their craft and how easily it could remain unseen in a fast moving world. Her work from this time was later shown in an exhibition curated by Rajiv Sethi. This is where Kabir first encountered her work. As a graphic designer, he was drawn to its honesty and depth. Their shared love for art brought them together, and he encouraged her to imagine a space of its own. For Brinda, this was about more than creating art. She wanted a practice that offered stability, where artisans were long term partners. With Kabir’s support, she founded Morii, a space rooted in growth, connection, and collective strength.
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OUR ETHICS AND SUSTAINABILITY PROFILE

At Morii, ethics and sustainability are not something we apply later, they are part of how the work begins. We make one piece at a time. Each work stays one of a kind, shaped by the hand that makes it. Even when two pieces begin from the same idea, they do not end the same. We do not try to standardise or correct these differences. The small shifts in stitch, surface, and form give the work its life. We work with a strong awareness of material. Most of our fabrics are handwoven and natural. Every fabric carries time, labour, and resources, so we try to use it fully and with care. Leftover pieces are not treated as waste, they are reused, layered, and slowly find their way into new surfaces. Our work stays rooted in where it comes from. Artisans continue to work from their homes, within their daily lives. This allows knowledge to remain within families and regions, instead of moving into anonymous systems. We see craft as a form of expression. Artisans are not just executing instructions, they shape the work with us. Their judgement influences form, scale, and rhythm. We also bring different crafts into conversation, allowing them to meet through process and carry layered histories forward.