Three MIT students. One closet problem nobody had solved.

Two of us couldn't find work clothes that actually fit. One of us spent years watching a broken industry from the inside. We met at MIT Sloan and realized we were all circling the same problem — professional clothing wasn't built for real bodies, real transitions, or real lives. So we decided to build it ourselves.

Who we are ...

Charlotte - Former USMC intelligence Marine. After years in uniform, Charlotte knew how to walk into any room with authority — but transitioning into corporate life meant figuring out a whole new dress code, on a whole new body, with no real playbook. She interned at BCG and built one anyway. She brings the structure, the grit, and the refusal to accept "close enough."

Dan - Former US Navy Supply Officer. After the military, Dan went straight to the source — working at State & Liberty, where he saw exactly how fashion's supply chain operates and exactly where it breaks down. The problem wasn't demand. It was that the whole system was built for a fictional average. He's now interning at Deloitte in Boston, and he knows what it takes to fix the backend.

Aria - Former Division I Tennis athlete turned Accenture and McKinsey consultant. Going from practice gear to the office meant learning that "women's workwear" wasn't built for athletes — the fit was wrong, the fabric unforgiving, the comfort nonexistent. She spent her consulting years doing bottom-up research on why systems fail. Turns out, this one was no different.