The makers behind the British Jersey
Made under one roof in Loughborough - from fabric to final stitch.
At the heart of British Jersey are Roy and Helen - a knit-machine mechanic and a garment maker, working together the way few still do.
They knit the fabric, cut the pattern, and sew each piece - all by hand, all in the same workshop.
At the centre of it is Roy’s Electronic Jacquard Striper - one of the last machines of its kind in the country. Running on floppy disks, knitting at a rare 14-gauge, it produces a cotton with real depth, weight and texture - the way proper jerseys should feel.
Once knitted, the fabric travels just 8 miles to be finished and scoured, before returning to Roy and Helen’s studio to be cut and sewn by hand.
Slow, deliberate, quietly exceptional. British cotton jersey, made properly.

Drawn from old jerseys, made new - knitted in the British Isles, each carrying its own quiet story.