A curated directory of US-based mills, farms, yarn spinners, dye makers, and fiber processors — built for designers and brands who want to source closer to home.
For most of the 20th century, America had a thriving domestic textile industry — from the cotton farms of the South to the woolen mills of New England, the garment district in New York to the dye houses of the Mid-Atlantic. Over the past few decades, much of that production moved overseas. The map went dark.
This directory is an attempt to redraw it. Not a comprehensive census — but a living, curated list of the mills, farms, processors, and makers who are still here, still producing, and often hard to find through conventional channels.
It was built by someone with a foot in both worlds: a decade as a textile designer in the fashion industry, sourcing and speccing fabrics through global supply chains, and a childhood on a dairy farm in Wisconsin. The gap between where fiber comes from and where clothes get made has always felt personal.
The goal is simple: make it easier for designers and brands to find US-based producers, build direct relationships, and source with more intention.
We recognize there's a spectrum — many brands and designers do meaningful domestic work alongside other production, and we have deep respect for that. As the directory grows, we plan to revisit these boundaries. For now, we want this to be a resource you can use without second-guessing what's behind a listing.
The directory grows through community knowledge. If you work with, know of, or run a US-based textile producer that meets our criteria, we want to hear about it.
We recognize there's a spectrum, and we have deep respect for brands doing meaningful domestic work. We plan to revisit these boundaries as the directory grows.
Submissions are reviewed manually. We aim to respond within 1–2 weeks. By submitting, you confirm this producer meets the eligibility criteria.