There is a certain gravity in the way heritage is being rewritten today as a living, breathing tool for the modern Filipino in constant motion.
At the Fino store in Rockwell last week, Architect Royal Pineda’s “Atlas” collection launched a “tactile map of life,” where every hand-punched slot and woven strip in the Royal Weave (a meticulous process of hand-punching and weaving leather strips to create depth and water resistance) serves as a landmark of Filipino identity.
The Atlas Overnighter and its kin stand as a testament to “Modern Filipino” sensibility — rooted in the ancestral weaving traditions of the Cordillera — called Pasiking — yet designed to move seamlessly as one navigates through their everyday life. It is design that narrates both function and form, offering a familiar silhouette twisted by the discipline of an architect’s eye and the warmth of a craftsman’s hand.
Guests marveled at the supple, confident slouch of the hand-woven leather, the message was clearer than ever: our stories, when told through the lens of precision and authenticity, are essential citizens of the world. This is practical luxury, reminding us that home is not just a place, but a feeling we carry with us one detail at a time.