Fabric
Lace overlay on a polyblend body. Smooth slip beneath. Side zip hidden under the wrap.

$245 to $355 · quoted in consultation
A cheollik with a lace overlay across the bodice. The chima is offered in two lengths, both with the same overlay and the same wrap closure. The lace reads ivory against a contrast slip beneath.

Cheollik, with lace.
Lace overlay on a polyblend body. Smooth slip beneath. Side zip hidden under the wrap.
A bridal shower in the long. An anniversary dinner in the mini three weeks later. The cheollik that travels well and reads gently formal in two registers, packed into one carry-on for a single weekend trip.
Cheollik began as a court robe with pleats from a fitted yoke. The form has held its architecture for six centuries because it solves a practical problem: a long line that moves without losing the silhouette. Modern tailors keep the bones and let the surface do the talking. A lace overlay is one answer.
The Deuollin lays ivory lace across the bodice over a contrast slip. The two lengths share the same overlay. The long carries the traditional silhouette and the photograph it earns. The mini cuts above the knee for the room that wants the cheollik in a shorter register. A side zip hides under the wrap closure. The Seoul workshop tacks the overlay so the lace lays clean.
Worn at a bridal shower in the long, packed into a carry-on and worn again at a cocktail dinner the next week in the mini. The piece that answers two invitations in one trip. The lace reads as the same fabric in both rooms. The cheollik reads as the same conviction.
Hand-finished in Seoul. Inspected and fitted in San Mateo.
Replies usually within one business day, by email or text to (707) 718-3579.