Big air.
Small humans.

Oversized streetwear for one to four, made in Tirupur from cotton your kid can actually breathe in.

See the capsule →
SCROLL · CAPSULE 01

THE THESIS

We make clothes for kids that don't look like kids' clothes.

A two-year-old can wear a drop-shoulder tee. A three-year-old can wear baggy checkered trousers stacked over canvas sneakers. They can look like a person, not a category. The clothes can still be 240 GSM combed organic cotton, washable fifty times, finished by people we know in Tirupur. Soft fabric is not the opposite of structured silhouette. Both can exist.

CAPSULE 01 · THREE PIECES · CUT IN INDIA

The first three.

See all three →
The Drop-Shoulder Tee
₹2,200 GOTS
The Wide-Leg Trouser
₹2,800 OEKO-TEX

◇ THE LOOP

Send it back. Get the next size for less.

Toddlers grow. Clothes shouldn't end in a landfill. Trade in any Patang piece your kid has outgrown and we'll credit your account — then resell it, cleaned and graded, to a family who wants it.

How The Loop works →

BOMBAY · 5:45 PM · NOVEMBER

Cut, stitched, finished — in India.

Our knitwear is made in a small unit in Tirupur, Tamil Nadu, that we visited eleven times before placing our first order. The wovens are cut and sewn in a Noida workshop that specialises in fashion-forward kids' bottoms. We pay in advance, in full, every time.

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JOURNAL

Letters from the studio.

All entries →
FIT · 18 MAY 2026
Why we measure in years, not months
Most kidswear sizing pretends to be precise. We think honest is better than precise.
FABRIC · 09 MAY 2026
240 GSM is a feeling, not a number
A short story about weight, hand, and what it means when a fabric drapes the way it should.
FIT · 02 MAY 2026
A short defence of the oversized fit
On why a tee that's six centimetres too wide is the most generous thing a brand can offer a growing child.

Letters from Patang — about once a month, never marketing.