MD75 builds garments through accumulation of human gestures. This pullover began as raw Italian wool, then passed through the hands of artisans who dip natural sponges in dye baths and press them against the knit surface. Each contact point absorbs color differently depending on pressure, saturation, and the wool's weave density. The result is a mottled, cloud-like pattern that shifts between saturated darks and pale halos - a surface that looks aged from the first wear, as though this sweater has already lived a decade.
The destroy embroidery is deliberate deconstruction: raw edges left exposed, stitching that appears to unravel but holds, intentional fraying that softens further with every wash. The wool itself is mid-weight and slightly coarse underhand - you feel its presence against skin, a texture that warms quickly and breathes through layering. The knit has structure without stiffness, draping loosely from the shoulders while holding its shape at the ribbed hem and cuffs.
Over months, the sponge-dyed areas will fade at friction points - elbows, shoulders, the spot where a bag strap crosses - revealing lighter tones beneath. The destroy details will fray further, curling at the edges in ways unique to how you move. MD75 does not make perfect garments. They make garments that become perfect through wear.









