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Young Indigenous woman mid-laugh on a city rooftop at golden hour, wearing an oversized graphic hoodie with Woodland floral motif, hair caught by wind, soft-focus skyline behind her
Indigenous-Owned · Artist-Attributed

Weave

Ancestral patterns stitched into modern silhouettes. Every tag carries a Nation. Every piece carries a name.

🌿

Nations Represented

23+

Artist Collaborators

47

Pieces Sold

3,200+

Artist Revenue Share

40%

The Lineage

Every stitch has a story.
We show you both.

Each collection reveals its origin — the traditional context first, then the modern interpretation. You're not just shopping. You're learning the lineage.

Archival-style photograph of traditional Anishinaabe beadwork patterns on fabric, rich floral motifs in earth tones and indigo
Anishinaabe

Traditional Context

Revealing
Young Indigenous woman in urban setting wearing oversized hoodie screen-printed with contemporary Woodland floral interpretation
Anishinaabe

Modern Interpretation

AnishinaabeBestseller

Woodland Floral Beadwork

Woodland Oversized Hoodie

Ceremonial moccasins and bandolier bags adorned with floral beadwork patterns passed through generations of Anishinaabe women, each motif carrying clan and family meaning.

Screen-printed on 400gsm heavyweight cotton. The floral geometry is a direct collaboration with beadwork artist Makwa Ojiins.

Archival photograph of traditional ribbon skirt with flowing colorful ribbons at a powwow ceremony
Lakota / Dakota

Traditional Context

Revealing
Indigenous woman in modern city street wearing contemporary ribbon-inspired midi skirt with structural ribbon-panel detailing
Lakota / Dakota

Modern Interpretation

Lakota / DakotaNew

Ribbon Skirt Silhouette

Ribbon Panel Midi Skirt

The ribbon skirt is a sacred garment worn at ceremony, powwow, and prayer — ribbons flowing as a visual prayer, each color chosen with intention by the wearer.

Structural ribbon panels reimagined as streetwear. Designed in consultation with Dakota seamstresses. Pairs with your blazer.

Museum display of traditional Tlingit Chilkat woven textile with bold geometric yellow, black, and white clan patterns
Tlingit

Traditional Context

Revealing
Indigenous man in contemporary city wearing structured bomber jacket with Chilkat-geometry print panels in black and gold
Tlingit

Modern Interpretation

TlingitLimited

Chilkat Weaving Geometry

Chilkat Geometry Bomber

Chilkat weaving is among the most technically complex textile arts in the world — each piece taking months to complete, the geometric forms encoding clan histories and supernatural beings.

Tlingit geometric forms translated to a structured bomber. Approved and co-designed by Tlingit artist Kéet Yaakw.

The Collection

Shop the Lineage

Artist name, Nation, and tradition listed before price — because provenance comes first.

White heavyweight cotton tee with bold Thunderbird graphic in indigo and gold, inspired by Plains ledger art
Artist Pick
Blackfoot Confederacy

Sasha Swiftwind · Plains ledger art tradition

Thunderbird Graphic Tee

$72

Lavender purple joggers with subtle metallic jingle-cone embellishment detail at hem, worn casually
Ojibwe

Marigold Redcloud · Jingle dress healing ceremony

Jingle Dress Joggers

$128

Curated outfit set showing contemporary moccasins styled with a structured blazer for professional settings
New Drop
Cherokee Nation

Desi Ironstar · Eastern woodland moccasin craft

Mocs × Blazer Set

$340

Structured six-panel cap in deep indigo with turquoise-inspired embroidered geometric pattern on front panel
Diné (Navajo)

Naveen Runningwater · Navajo silversmithing turquoise motifs

Turquoise Trail Cap

$58

Oversized heather purple hoodie with large back graphic of contemporary dreamcatcher geometric in gold and white
Bestseller
Cree Nation

Leila Morningdove · Cree web-weaving protective art

Dreamcatcher Hoodie

$165

Structured bomber jacket with eight-pointed Lakota star quilt pattern panels in cream, indigo, and gold
Limited
Standing Rock Sioux

James Twostars · Lakota star quilt gifting ceremony

Star Quilt Bomber

$248

Voices

What they're
carrying home.

"

I wore the Mocs × Blazer set to my first board presentation. Three colleagues asked where I got my shoes. I got to say 'Cherokee Nation, artist Desi Ironstar.' That conversation alone was worth every dollar.

Portrait of Tamara Swiftbird, Indigenous woman attorney with confident expression

Tamara Swiftbird

Environmental Attorney · Mohawk Nation

"

My grandma cried when she saw me in the Ribbon Panel skirt. She said it looked like prayer and fashion at the same time. I'm Dakota, grew up in Minneapolis — this is the first brand that's made something that fits both of those truths.

Portrait of Jordan Eagleheart, young Indigenous man with warm smile

Jordan Eagleheart

UX Designer · Standing Rock Sioux

"

As a non-Native ally, I spent years wanting to support Indigenous artists without accidentally appropriating. Weave solved that completely — every tag tells me exactly whose culture I'm engaging with and how they're compensated.

Portrait of Priya Nambiar, South Asian woman teacher with warm expression

Priya Nambiar

High School Teacher · Ally · Tamil-American

"

The Chilkat Bomber is the most-complimented piece I've ever owned. I've worn it in Seattle, in New York, in London. Every single time, it starts a real conversation about Tlingit art — and I get to be the one carrying that story.

Portrait of Marcus Raven, Indigenous man with confident expression in urban setting

Marcus Raven

Software Engineer · Tlingit Nation

Limited Artist Collaboration

Still wrapped in
tissue paper.

Our most ambitious collaboration yet — a 12-piece capsule with Métis multi-disciplinary artist Cheyenne Swifthawk, merging traditional floral hide-painting with contemporary outerwear construction. Drops to Circle members 48 hours early.

12 Pieces Only
Limited edition clothing pieces wrapped in soft tissue paper with a handwritten artist tag, partially unwrapped to reveal a rich purple garment with gold floral embroidery

Cheyenne Swifthawk × Weave

Métis Nation · Spring 2026

Starting at

$195

Drop Date

March 15, 2026

Available To

Circle First

Join the Circle

Early access to every drop. Artist stories before anyone else. Invitations to virtual studio visits with our collaborating artists. No spam — only stories worth carrying.

  • 48-hour early access to all limited drops
  • Monthly artist story dispatches
  • Virtual studio visits with collaborating artists
  • First look at unreleased pattern archives

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Our Story

Clothing that earns
the right to be worn.

Weave was founded in 2021 by Anika Thundercloud (Anishinaabe, Red Lake Nation) and Dario Swifthawk (Métis) with one conviction: that Indigenous pattern-making is one of the most sophisticated design traditions on earth, and it deserved a brand that treated it like that.

Not a charity. Not a novelty. A fashion house — with revenue sharing, artist attribution, and a commitment that every garment teaches its wearer something true.

40%

Artist revenue share on every sale

23+

Nations represented in current collections

$0

Licensing fees ever charged to artists

100%

Artist veto on final garment design

Founders Anika Thundercloud and Dario Swifthawk in their studio, surrounded by fabric samples and artist sketches, warm golden light

Anika Thundercloud & Dario Swifthawk

Co-founders · Anishinaabe & Métis

Questions

The ones you should ask
before you buy.

Ready to carry a story?

Every piece is in stock and ships within 3 business days.

Shop the Lineage