Rayong has always been a place of quiet color. Between the sea breeze and golden pineapple fields lies Saen Yai, a small community where people have long understood how beauty and purpose can coexist. Here, villagers collect what was once discarded — pineapple leaves left behind after harvest — and turn them into thread. Instead of burning the leaves and filling the air with smoke, they spin thread, dye them by hand, and weaving them into beautiful fabric. In doing so, preserve not only the environment but also their way of life.
When Trin Pathomsak first discovered the fabric at Saen Yai, the special pattern called ‘Kramuk’ he was drawn not just to its texture but to its story. The material carried the rough honesty of the land — thick, imperfect, and full of life. Its weave added volume and structure, giving wearers a sense of confidence and form that was neither slim nor oversized — simply balanced.
That discovery became the beginning of Andruha — a collection that blends the freedom of Rayong’s earth tones with the discipline of modern design. Each piece reflects Trin’s belief that clothing should not be bound by gender or convention. It should express individuality while honoring the hands and hearts that create it.
At Andruha, we see fabric not just as material, but as memory — of fields yellow with pineapples, of laughter shared in small communities, of a world that can be both simple and extraordinary. Our mission is to carry those stories forward, so that when you wear Andruha, you don’t just wear a shirt. You wear a piece of Rayong — reimagined for the world.