A drop is not a sale.
It’s an event.
Most brands release products.
MORKA releases moments.
Each one built around a fabric that will never be produced again.
We find it.
In places no one looks.
Swatches from discontinued collections of high-end textile houses — Flemish weavers, British jacquard mills, French velvet ateliers. Each catalogue represents a collection that no longer exists. The fabrics inside it are the last known samples. They were never meant to become art. That is precisely why they are.
We mount it.
By hand. Once.
Each swatch is mounted using one of four methods chosen for the specific fabric — float frame, rigid panel, lacing on stretcher, or scroll mount. Maximum 10 pieces per edition. Each piece is slightly different from the others, because the fabric itself is not uniform. That is not a defect. That is the point.
It opens.
Then it closes.
A drop window is open for 5 to 7 days. During that time, you can order. When the window closes, it closes. There is no waiting list, no second chance, no restock. The next drop will be something entirely different. Following on Instagram is the only way to never miss a window.
Something
on the back.
Every piece arrives with a handwritten Certificate of Textile Origin fixed to the back. The textile house — described by country and age, not by name. The collection and the year it was discontinued. The material composition. The piece number. It is not a receipt. It is a document of provenance.
The Certificate
of Origin
When buyers turn the piece over and find the certificate, they do not feel like they bought something. They feel like they discovered something. That distinction is everything.
The certificate is handwritten, partially filled with specific details about that exact fabric — and signed. It is fixed to the back with a MORKA wax seal. It is the element most photographed, most shared, and most talked about.
“The fabric no longer exists.
The piece does.”
Follow the drop.
The best way to never miss a window is to follow on Instagram. Drops are announced there first — before the site, before email.
