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Fabric Intelligence

The label behind the label.

Atelia reads composition the way an experienced buyer does. Translating fibres into drape, durability, breathability, maintenance burden, and price-fairness. Not "polyester is bad." Contextual tradeoffs, explained.

Three fabrics side by side
Four reasoning dimensions

Fabric understood across how it lives.

01

Drape and structure.

How the fibre falls. How it holds shape across long wear. Whether it reads as fluid, architectural, or somewhere in between. Drape is half the silhouette.

"Heavyweight wool, structured, shape-retaining. Lightweight viscose, fluid, drape-forward."
02

Breathability and thermal.

How the garment performs across temperatures and hours of wear. Wool insulates dry warmth. Synthetics trap heat. Linen breathes but creases. Context matters.

"Higher synthetic content may feel warmer in indoor settings."
03

Durability and ageing.

How the fibre wears across years. Natural fibres age gracefully but pill. Synthetics resist abrasion but pill plastic. Atelia models cost-per-wear, not just price.

"Built to age well. Expect modest pilling at high-friction areas after 18 months."
04

Maintenance burden.

How much of your life this garment will quietly demand. Dry-clean-only is a recurring cost. Iron-friendly is a freedom. Atelia surfaces the upkeep before purchase.

"Dry-clean only, expect roughly £40 a year upkeep at typical wear frequency."
A worked example

One garment. Read four ways.

Care label macro
Max Mara. Wool and Mohair Blazer. £695
68%
Virgin Wool
Natural temperature regulation. Holds shape.
premium
28%
Mohair
Lustrous sheen. Resists creasing. Adds resilience.
premium
4%
Elastane
Minor stretch. Acceptable for tailoring.
functional
Atelia verdict
"Material composition meaningfully justifies the price tier. Best for autumn-winter occasions where structure is part of the signal. Mohair adds subtle sheen. Choose carefully if matte is required."
9.2/10
Side by side

Same silhouette. Very different lives.

Three blazers, all priced similarly, all advertised as premium. Atelia surfaces the differences that matter.

Max Mara, £695 Another Tomorrow, £480 The Frankie Shop, £295
composition68% wool, 28% mohair, 4% elastane72% wool, 26% viscose, 2% elastane60% polyester, 38% viscose, 2% elastane
drapeStructured with subtle sheenSoft fluid drape, matte finishHeavy but inelastic
breathabilityExcellent (natural fibres)Very goodLimited
durability9.0 / 108.2 / 106.9 / 10
maintenanceDry-clean onlyDry-clean onlyMachine washable cool
price-valuePriced for fibreFair for categoryOverpriced for blend
A quiet glossary

Fibres, without the moralising.

Natural

Wool

Insulates dry warmth. Breathable. Holds shape. Ages with character. Sometimes itchy at coarser grades. Best for tailoring.

Natural

Cotton

Breathable. Soft. Easily washed. Creases easily. Performance scales with weave density and finishing.

Natural

Linen

Exceptionally breathable. Creases as a feature. Loosens with wear. Built for warm weather, not formal restraint.

Natural

Silk

Luxurious hand. Temperature-regulating. Delicate. Stains visibly. High maintenance, high signal.

Semi-synthetic

Viscose, Rayon

Fluid drape. Breathable. Derived from wood pulp. Wrinkles. Often supports natural fibres in blends.

Synthetic

Polyester

Wrinkle-resistant. Durable. Cheap. Holds heat. Best in blends, not dominant share at premium price tiers.

Read every label. Trust what is underneath.