Where nature meets nurture
The key to a high vibrational life®
WELCOME! (Fáilte)
There’s something magical about using plants to dye fabric and making herbal medicine. It connects you to old, slow ways of the past, where taking care of others is as important as taking care of Mother Earth. I pick neutral to wild, vibrant colors from the landscape to dye, sometimes capturing imprints from the leaves and petals by marking on the fabric, using old tried and true practices, evoking a range of emotions.
My work is inspired by my Celtic heritage, the Mother archetype, and cycles. Each botanical print expressed in handmade home decor to apparel designed in feminine silhouettes is a homage to the Divine Feminine and the time in which we live as we transitions towards authenticity and softness, as well as holding one’s ground.
My textiles, apparel and herbal skincare are created carefully, slowly, with intention, and they tell a story. My hope is to create beautiful, unique, well-made things to bring you delight, support, and empowerment as you evolve into your true essence. I set up my business as a reflection of what I want to see more of in the world.
My name is Molly Dunn, and I’ve been practicing natural dyes since late 2018. It was through this work that I found deep healing and a passion for creating beautiful things using my intuition and my hands, which is a way to connect with my inner child and wisdom. It was during this time I was going through some deeply personal times that were some of the darkest nights. Still, as I look back, I honor this period of fragility and know it as a time of incubation and positive opportunities to delve deep in to memory since this was a time of transition and to restore myself, revealing an uplifting and inspiring new outlook.
Most of my dyeing history has been through trying a number of different methods and learning from the mistakes that I’ve made. As with anything new you’re learning, there is no instant way of learning a craft — just a trial and error process.
I’ve taken classes from experts in the field online or in person, watched countless videos, and read many books to problem solve. I’ll have to admit, it was by doing; using my hands, arranging petal and leaves on the cloth, taking in the scents in my kitchen from pots brewing bugs, flowers, bark, or leaves is what ignited a special spark, the knowing deep inside that I’ve done this before, memory perhaps stored in my DNA, and to just be patient. Remembering brings me back to my child self when I recall running barefoot, picking wild raspberries and grapes, and making mud pots and berry potions with my stained hands.
Parallel to natural dyeing, there is my other love; I will teach others how to remember their past through the ritual of writing so they can heal, become whole, and live a purposeful, high-vibrational life. I consider my writing to be as beneficial as my dye endeavors and hope to marry the two as a part of my ongoing creative process.
Central to my artistic pursuit is the empowerment of the individual and the collective within the community. My work serves as a catalyst for women’s introspection, healing, health, happiness, and purpose. My mission is to encourage people from all walks of life and at any age to discover their authentic creative potential and reveal their true voice as an artist when moving through the process of healing the Mother within. My apparel, home decor and botanical skincare are foundational to nurturing you in order for you to do your life’s work. In a sense, we repair the Universe when we heal, which raises our vibration.
Our logo was created as an intentional symbol for the brand representing the Divine Feminine and the Golden Age of Aquarius—the rise of female power, balancing of energies at the level of raising awareness to our true power and purpose in life. The Celtic triskelion is a symbol of strength and the will to move forward and overcome diversity.
Where are the flowers,
the fair young flowers,
that lately sprang and stood in brighter light
and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood
—William Cullen Bryant