The Maker
Kavitha.
The maker behind every piece.
"She is selfish in only one way — she wants the best for the people she loves. And what she makes with her hands is her way of showing it."
Where it began
A craft learned young. Set aside for family. Reclaimed with quiet purpose.
Kavitha first learned to crochet as a young woman — before the responsibilities of life took over, before children, before the years that pass without you noticing. The craft stayed with her, folded into memory, while she gave her time to what mattered most: her family.
When both her children were grown and settled, she found herself with something she hadn't had in decades — time. She could have spent it doing nothing. Instead, in 2023, she picked up her hook again.
Not to prove anything. Not to start a business. Simply because she had always made things for the people she loved, and she wasn't about to stop now.
Who she is
Self-taught in the ways that matter. Humble in all the ways that don't.
Kavitha learned most things in life the same way — by doing them, quietly and without fuss. She is not someone who speaks loudly about what she can do. She simply does it, and lets the work say the rest.
She is deeply caring, thinks ahead for everyone but herself, and holds one belief without compromise: the people she loves deserve the best. Not just in what she makes — in everything.
Her granddaughter's crochet flowers. A sweater for a daughter-in-law. A beanie for a child who gets cold easily. She makes what she makes for specific people, with their specific needs in her mind. Every piece carries that intention.
"She doesn't think of herself first. But she is absolutely certain the people around her should have the best — and she will make it herself if she has to."
How she works
01 — Choosing the yarn
Every piece begins with the yarn — its weight, its texture, its colour. She handles it before she decides. If it doesn't feel right, it doesn't become anything.
02 — Holding the pattern in her mind
Some patterns she has made so many times they live in her hands, not her memory. For custom orders, she thinks it through before the first stitch — visualising the finished piece the way an architect sees a building before it exists.
03 — Stitching by hand
One stitch at a time. A sweater takes five to seven days. A bag, two to three. A flower, a few hours — but she will make five of them to find the one that's right. There is no shortcut she is willing to take.
04 — The finish
Before it leaves her hands, every piece is checked. Pressed if needed. Wrapped with care. Because the person receiving it deserves to open something that feels like it was made for them — because it was.
"I don't think of this as a business. I think of it as finally having the time to make things for the people who deserve them." — Kavitha
What she believes in
Slow making
Nothing is rushed. A piece takes as long as it takes — and not a stitch less. Speed was never part of how she learned this, and it will never be part of how she works.
Made for keeps
She doesn't make things to be used and forgotten. She makes things to be worn for years, gifted across generations, and kept the way you keep something that matters.
One of a kind
No two pieces leave her hands identical. The yarn behaves differently each time. The tension shifts. What you hold has never existed before, and never will again.