Description
Azadeh Yasaman Nabizadeh is an Iranian textile artist whose work revives traditional hand-weaving techniques and brings them into conversation with contemporary design. Drawing from methods such as Mowj weaving from Kordestan, her creations blend visual storytelling with deep cultural memory. Her woven pieces—ranging from garments to painterly carpets like The Cypress Grove, Images on Water—weave together nature, heritage, and craft.
Together with her husband Ali, Yasaman has journeyed through Iran’s diverse regions in search of forgotten textile traditions. These travels inform a label rooted in ancient garment construction, minimal cutting, and size-inclusive forms. Her collections, crafted entirely from natural fibers—cotton, wool, and silk—are produced locally in workshops across Golestan and Kashan. There, cotton yarns are spun in-house, silk traditions are revived, and Mowj-style wool weaving continues with care.
Natural dyeing remains central to her practice, guided by her and Ali’s deep regional knowledge. In every step, Yasaman’s work embodies a quiet resistance: preserving endangered techniques, celebrating ecological integrity, and keeping alive the tactile languages of Persian ancestry in a modern world.








