The Hands Behind the Cloth
Liezhi cloth is made from narrow strips of reclaimed fabric, woven slowly by hand into dense, textured surfaces.
Each piece carries small irregularities from the maker’s rhythm — quiet traces of time, touch, and care.
Explore By Material & Use
Ways To Carry Liezhi
One-of-a-kind woven bags shaped from reclaimed cloth, each with its own rhythm of color, texture, and use.
Objects For A Slower Everyday
We gather objects that ask for slower attention — a cup held in the morning, a woven cover softened by use, a vessel placed quietly in a room.
Materials That Remember
Reclaimed Textile
Cloth is torn, rewoven, and given another life. Its uneven surface holds color, repair, and the quiet marks of the hand.
Hand-formed Clay
Clay keeps the memory of touch. Slight variations in edge, surface, and glaze make each vessel quietly distinct.
Natural Soap
Made for daily rituals, our soaps bring scent, texture, and a softer rhythm to the bath.
Recommend Reading
Can AI Help Living Craft Traditions Survive?
In the age of AI, Planet Fix Project explores how new tools can lower the cost of being seen — helping artisan communities, minority cultures, and living craft traditions reach global homes through fair trade and thoughtful storytelling.
Learn moreAuntie Yu Han: The Mangshi Artisan Behind Our Liezhi Weave
Meet Auntie Yu Han, a Dai textile artisan from Mangshi, Yunnan, whose Liezhi crack-weave work transforms reclaimed cloth into one-of-a-kind textile bags shaped by memory, texture, and hand.
Learn moreWhat Is Liezhi Fabric? A Traditional Chinese Crack-Weave Textile from the Mountains
Liezhi fabric is a traditional Chinese textile craft that gives old cloth a second life. Worn garments and fabric offcuts are torn into strips, then rewoven by hand into a textured, one-of-a-kind fabric rooted in mountain craft traditions.
Learn more
Why We Gather
At Planet Fix Project, we gather objects that carry more than function — pieces shaped by material, memory, and the hands that make them.
We work with reclaimed textiles, natural materials, and small-batch craft traditions to extend the life of materials and support slower forms of making.
Each piece is an invitation to live with care: for the home, for the body, for the maker, and for the earth.
Notes On Craft, Materials, And Slow Living
Occasional notes on handmade objects, material stories, and slower ways of living.






