Egyptian cotton - A notion of terroir
When it comes to cotton, the soil that produces it is just as important as the notion of terroir for wine. Since antiquity, the land of northern Egypte has been recognized as producing the best cotton: varieties of extra-long staple (ELS), as the fibres are called, which are transformed into fine, silky, resistant threads.
On this land with a human dimension, cotton is still grown as it was centuries ago. The soil is left fallow if the conditions are not ideal, and the cotton is carefully picked by hand.
It is in Egypt that the most reputable Italian spinners find their raw material, notably Giza 45 and 70, cottons with ELS that have inspired ça va de soi creations over the years. Our passion for exquisite materials pushes ça va de soi to explore the globe in search of new fibres.
It was in Egypte, once again, in the rich Nile Delta, that we found Karnak-Menoufi, a variety as ancient as it is rare. Darkened by the silt of the river, this cotton is grown only during years when nature and the soil create the right conditions. After a ten-year halt, this fibre is once again being farmed, in quantities so limited that the stocks are sold only by auction. Legendary in the trade, this cotton with long silks, spun ultra-fine, is offered in understated models that allow this unique material to take center stage.
ZAZIE white
GREGORY sesame
MEMPHIS nile
FAUSTINA black
NICOLE plum
SHANNON white
MEMPHIS magnolia
LUCIENNE black
CHIPPIE mandarin violet
AMEL black
MICKY papyrus
LUCIENNE lapis-azuli
AMEL lapis-azuli
SHANNON papyrus
RUMBA black
KOKO sesame
GREGORY nile
MICKY black
TONY magnolia
LUCIENNE white
MICKY ink
ROSETTA mandarin
FAUSTINA papyrus
BESSIE nile
FAUSTINA ink
TONY nile
MEMPHIS black
NICOLE white
SANDRA cumin
AMEL carrot
PERSÉE white
TEX black
GREGORY black
NICOLE lapis-azuli