Hi. I'm Ashly. This is why I built this
I grew up in Aberdeenshire surrounded by fabric and craft. I spent years modelling, wearing more bodysuits than I can count. Every single one had the same problem. I decided to fix it.
What we stand for

Scottish Craftsmanship
I grew up in my mother's sewing studio in Aberdeenshire. I know what it feels like to hold something that's been made properly, the weight of it, the finish, the way it moves. That's the standard I hold every piece to.

Small-Batch Excellence
We make in small batches with suppliers I've chosen carefully and trust completely. That's not a compromise, it's a decision. I'd rather make fewer things well than more things quickly. Every piece that leaves here has been considered.

Women-Led Innovation
ComfiClose™ is patent-pending. I say that not to boast but because I think it matters. The idea that women solving women's problems deserves to be protected and recognised the same way any other innovation does. Patents aren't just for tech bros. We engineer comfort too.
I watched women twist themselves into knots just to make their bodysuit work. I thought: why is it on us to fix this?
I grew up in Aberdeenshire, spending hours in my mother's sewing studio seeing the kind of slow, careful attention that goes into making something that actually lasts. Quality wasn't an abstract value in our house. It was something you could feel.
Later, a career in modelling took me into the heart of the fashion industry. I wore everything. Saw everything. And noticed the same thing over and over, women adjusting, tucking, reaching behind themselves, un-popping and re-popping, accepting a daily discomfort they'd never been given a reason to question.
The bodysuit closure. Always at the crotch since the 1960's. Always in the way. Always, somehow, nobody's problem to solve.
It became mine.
I moved the closure to the tailbone where it's easy to reach, lies completely flat, and disappears against your skin. ComfiClose™ is now patent-pending.
Ashly
The woman who wore more bodysuits than she can count. The closure she refused to accept. The brand that came out of it.
Thanks for being part of it.
