About Shiloh

For a long time, finding well-made clothes meant hunting for them. Consignment racks, saved Poshmark searches, the quiet thrill of finding something from thirty years ago that was simply built better. I was never doing it for sport. I was doing it because the alternative — buying something new — kept falling short.

The frustration is specific if you've felt it. A blazer with beautiful construction, impeccable drape, and a fabric tag that reads 100% polyester. Workwear brands with aspirational photography and clothes that pill by February. The brands that got it right — the ones with real fabric integrity and considered design — either charged $600 a piece or were designed for someone else entirely.

The gap shouldn't exist. But it does.

I'm an engineer by training, which means I'm wired to find the actual solution rather than work around the constraints everyone else accepts. So instead of sourcing from the same European supply chains that keep natural fiber workwear out of reach, I built something different: fabric sourced directly from Peru, manufactured in Colombia through personal relationships I built over years. The unit economics are real. The quality doesn't ask you to compromise.

Shiloh started as a trouser I wanted and couldn't find — merino wool, properly constructed, designed for a woman's actual proportions, at a price that made sense for everyday wear. That trouser exists now. And it's the beginning of something larger: a reliable source for the pieces that working women have been looking for in all the wrong places.

The woman Shiloh is made for already knows what she wants. She reads the fabric content label. She has strong opinions about fit. She's done settling, and she's done overpaying for the privilege of doing so.

This is for her.

— Chloe