Small hanks of yarn are then individually dyed indigo and dried in the sun so the colour changes during oxidisation before the whole process begins again. Five times.
You might never wear a piece by Faustine Steinmetz, just like you might never own a piece of haute couture. Not because it is off-trend, too complicated or unfashionable. Rather because she creates her clothes in such small numbers. And it's no wonder because they are made with a process more akin to the slow food movement than the burger flipping ethos of fast fashion.