04/29/2025
Who didn’t love hearing stories growing up, full of fantasy and alluring characters? Designer Kimberly Gordon, who lived in the UK and then Santa Barbara, fell in love with folklore. Like many adults, much of what she does today is influenced by her greatest childhood memories. Her fashion brand, Selkie, is very much a product of those memories of getting lost in stories full of fanciful, nostalgic and extra romantic folklore.
The name Selkie comes from Irish, Scottish, Icelandic and Scandinavian folklore. The Selkie is a shapeshifting mythological woman of the ocean who lives inside a seal skin. When she comes up to the rocks, she slips out of her skin to bask in the sun. If a man is able to steal her skin while she sleeps, she is forced to become his wife and live on land. But — if the Selkie finds her skin again, she transforms back into her true form and immediately returns to the sea, free. Gordon hopes women who wear her garments find themselves or feel true to who they are.
While we still live in a society that caters a bit more towards fashion trends for thinner or petite women, there has slowly been a shift as we see brands take on these stereotypes in runway shows. The response to such shows has been influencing what sizes are sold in stores. The brand Selkie made waves when their New York Fashion Week shows were more size-inclusive than most, which resulted in the shows going viral and the ability to expand their size offerings.
Selkie’s items are ready-to-wear, offering party dresses and lounge wear from XXS to 6x, meaning 13 sizes are offered. This is a rarity for most growing brands due to the high production cost to create, market and sell inventory in all sizes.
The brand defines itself as low-waste, as they create small batch drops of high-quality items, with some garments having only 15-20 ever made! While Selkie is not 100% sustainable due to the use of polyester, they are consciously committed to finding environmental ways to evolve. All of Selkie's prints are created in-house, and all fabrics are carefully and ethically sourced from different regions of China.
Read more here: https://www.annkm.com/publications/kgsx75lsifsg2nr1cgulovb8y8me3x
📸: Selkie Website
✏️: Hillary LeBlanc