MADE IN
मामाघर.
मामाघर — mama-ghar — literally translates to “mother's house.” It's the place you go back to during festivals. The version of home you carry inside your chest no matter what flag you wake up under.
We started Mamaghar in 2024 in a Patan studio above a momo shop, with two screen-printers, one designer, and a stack of heavyweight blanks. The brief was simple: streetwear that doesn't flatten Nepal into souvenir clichés.
We're not making clothes for tourists. We're making uniforms for the kids who grew up between two flags, three languages, and one homesick playlist.
Every piece is screen-printed by hand in our Lalitpur studio. We work with two family-run cut-and-sew partners — both we've walked, both pay above legal minimum.
No fast fashion. We do two seasonal drops and two capsules a year. Each piece is numbered. When a drop is gone, it's gone.
Devanagari, Newa script, Newar numerals. We work with Patan-based calligraphers to put the script in places it has historically been left out of: across the chest of a hoodie, the bill of a cap, the back of a tee.
Built by three.
Grew up between Kathmandu and Brooklyn. Spent a decade in NYC streetwear before coming back to start Mamaghar.
Newari calligrapher and screen-printer. Runs the Patan studio. Believes the right color of bone-white is a religious experience.
Ex-DHL. Makes sure every package leaves Patan on time and arrives in one piece, anywhere on the planet.
Two years, one studio.
- 24Studio opens above the momo shopFirst two screen-printers installed. First sample run: 12 tees. We wear-test for six months.
- 25Drop 00 — Friends & FamilyA 200-piece run sold via DM and word-of-mouth. Sells out in three weeks.
- 25First diaspora ordersPackages start going to Sydney, Toronto, London. We hire Sangam to run logistics.
- 26SS26 Drop 01 — Public launchMamaghar Streetwear goes live to the public. Four collections, twelve pieces.