A Wabash that never existed.
Yet somehow, it feels real.

Deep indigo—
lined with precise dots and stripes.
In the early 1900s,
Wabash fabric became a symbol of workwear
across the United States and Canada.
Its name is said to come from a river,
or a railroad—
woven into the memory of labor and indigo.
Rugged. Functional.
Yet quietly beautiful.
But what if—
French refinement had met
American workwear at that time?
Perhaps Wabash
would have taken on a more subtle,
more elegant expression.
This fabric was born from that imagination.
Reconstructed from 1930s French textile archives,
then dyed in indigo and discharge-printed into stripes.
As it ages,
the indigo fades—
revealing the hidden pattern beneath.
A print that evolves over time.
This is not a reproduction.
Not a copy of the past.
A different Wabash—
a story that never existed,
woven into the present.
The product is scheduled for release in 2026.








