Mineral Sweatshirt

Dyed in a giant bath of crystallised magma.

$345

Model is 5ft 11 / 180cm with a 38 inch / 97cm chest, and wears size Medium.

  • Garment dyed with sodalite mineral powder
  • Built with 55% organic hemp
  • Hemp combined with organic cotton for softness

As we continue to look for new, low impact ways to dye clothing, we’ve turned to the colouring tools of early man – minerals, rocks, and soils. Minerals don’t just tell the story of life on Earth, they also tell the story of colour. When our solar system settled into its current shape around 4.5 billion years ago, Earth was created by a series of galactic collisions. Tectonic plates began to form. And geological life and biological life fused together to create vast mineral deposits in the Earth’s upper crust. So when prehistoric man first picked up a prehistoric paintbrush, they turned to the ground around them. Today, instead of using those minerals to paint cave walls, we’re using them to dye clothing. Our Mineral Sweatshirt is garment dyed in a giant bath of sodalite. There are only 2 by-products of this process – sediment, and water. Both of which can go straight back into nature.

Technical Details

Material made in Portugal: 55% organic hemp, 45% organic cotton
Dyed with 95% sodalite mineral powder and 5% synthetic pigment
Soft and breathable
Natural stretch
Material weighs 440g/m2
Sweatshirt weighs 680 grams
Machine wash 30°C
Constructed in Portugal
01 02

When prehistoric man first picked up a prehistoric paintbrush, they turned to the minerals, rocks and soils around them.

Dyed with an ancient blue mineral called sodalite

Blue pigments are incredibly rare in nature – which meant that blue was one of the hardest colours for early civilisations to make. The one we’ve used to dye the Mineral Sweatshirt is called sodalite and 5,000 years ago the ancient Caral civilisation was using it as currency in the high Andean plateau.

Sodalite is found in the veins of plutonic igneous rocks and in lava on the foothills of Mount Vesuvius.

Sodalite is found in plutonic igneous rocks and lava

Sodalite is a tectosilicate mineral that’s normally translucent blue in colour. It’s sometimes found in pure crystal form and at its highest quality can be used in jewellery, sculptures and as an architectural stone. Having been formed by crystallising magmas rich in sodium, its name literally means ‘sodium stone’. Deposits of sodalite are found in the veins of plutonic igneous rocks, and have even been discovered in lava on the foothills of Italy’s Mount Vesuvius. Ours also comes from Italy, in an area that stretches from Venice to Verona.

Blue used to be more valuable than gold

Sodalite is a close relative of other blue minerals like lazurite and lapis lazuli, a prized material that was imported to Europe during the Middle Ages. Lapis lazuli used to be ground down into a pigment called ultramarine, that was once even more valuable than gold. We carry out a similar process with sodalite, grinding it down to a fine powder to create pigment for dyeing.

Garment dyed in sodalite powder

The sodalite is collected, refined, refracted, and turned into a clean powder. We enhance the blue colour with a tiny amount of synthetic pigment. Then to make the sweatshirt we add the mineral powder to a vat of water and submerge the whole garment – a process called garment dyeing. There are only two byproducts of this process. Sediment, and water. Both of which can go straight back into nature. The synthetic pigment only remains in trace amounts and produces no negative impacts.

We add the sodalite powder to a vat of water and submerge the whole sweatshirt in it.

It creates a softer sweatshirt with a softer colour

Most clothes today are piece-dyed, which means the fabric is dyed before it’s cut up and sewn together. Garment dyeing requires more time and more care, but it creates softer fabrics with softer colours. And it means that rather than harsh chemicals, we only need to use heat, time and pressure for the colour of the sodalite to stick to the sweatshirt.

Minerals create a different kind of colour

Nearly all the colour you see in clothing today will have been created with petroleum-based dyes. But colour in clothing existed long before the chemical dyeing industry was invented. So we’ve gone back to the colour palette of early man. Because each sweatshirt is made using minerals made by nature, you might find small differences in colour across it. And because it’s garment dyed, every sweatshirt has a pre-worn look.

Feels like your favourite old sweatshirt

To add to the softness of the sweatshirt, we don’t just garment dye it in minerals, they’re also made with a blend of 55% hemp and 45% organic cotton, giving it a soft feel and a nice weight.

We need to rethink colour

We tend to think of the colour on our clothes as one thing. Something uniform, bold, and often bright. But this is created using highly synthetic processes. And the colours that nature produces aren’t like that. There are no crazy colours on cave walls because they simply didn’t exist. Dyeing clothing in minerals, rocks and soils is designed to help us rethink how colour can be made.

Size + Fit

The Mineral Sweatshirt is designed with a regular fit.

Size XS S M L XL XXL
Fits chest 83 - 90 91 - 98 99 - 106 107 - 114 115 - 122 123 - 130
Fits waist 71 - 76 76 - 81 81 - 86 86 - 91 91 - 96 96 - 101
Size XS S M L XL XXL
Fits chest 33 - 36 36 - 39 39 - 42 42 - 45 45 - 48 48 - 51
Fits waist 28 - 30 30 - 32 32 - 34 34 - 36 36 - 38 38 - 40