An ancient craft. An unfakeable luxury.


Cutwork is one of the oldest and most demanding embroidery techniques in European craft. The artisan first embroiders the design onto the fabric with tiny, dense satin stitches. Then, with surgical precision, she cuts away the fabric between the stitches — leaving an intricate lacework where the cloth used to be.

What looks like an absence is the result of hours of presence. Every hole is deliberate. Every edge is reinforced. The pattern lives in the negative space.

The Richelieu tradition

Richelieu is the most refined form of cutwork. Named after Cardinal Richelieu of seventeenth-century France, who championed it as an alternative to imported Venetian lace, the technique spread across Europe and was adopted by embroiderers from Madeira to Moldavia.

Romanian and Ukrainian artisans developed their own variations — bolder geometric motifs, organic florals, integration with traditional cross-stitch. What you find here is the Eastern European interpretation of a centuries-old European craft, curated from the workshops we have spent over a decade championing.

Why it matters

A single richelieu piece can take between sixty and two hundred hours of handwork to complete. There is no machine that can replicate it. The cutting must be done by hand. The reinforcement must be done by hand. The design must be planned by hand. Every piece is, by definition, a one-of-a-kind object.

"In an age of digital reproduction, cutwork remains one of the few luxuries that cannot be faked."


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