Inside the
atelier.
We make fewer things, properly.
Maison Oré began with a quiet frustration — that most clothing is made to be replaced, not kept. So we built a house around the opposite idea: choose the cloth before the silhouette, cut in small numbers, and stand behind every piece for as long as you wear it.
Each garment is produced in a run of two hundred. When the run is finished, the pattern is retired for good. No markdowns, no middle layers, no second guesses — just a small collection of considered pieces, released one volume at a time.
The cutting room — Volume Ⅶ
Three principles hold the
whole house together.
Cloth first
We choose the mill before the silhouette. Camelhair from Biella, undyed merino from the Borders — woven to weights built for real winters.
One cutter, one coat
Each overcoat is cut and finished by a single maker, whose initials are stitched inside the placket. You know exactly whose hands made it.
Made to be mended
Seams are sewn to be opened. Send a worn piece back and we repair it for life — because the most sustainable garment is the one you keep.
“A coat should outlast the season it was bought for — and the one after that.”
Wear it for
years.
See the current volume, or book a fitting at the atelier and meet the maker who'll cut your coat.