Chapter 01 — Winter 2026

Slippers, and the quiet hour.

Made in small batches in the materials our grandparents would still recognise — Australian sheepskin, merino, hand-loomed wool. Designed in Indiana, made for the long Australian winter.

The Otway Mule, illustrated in five named colourways
Bark
01 / 05

Bark

Five colourways, named for the things you see out an Australian window in winter. Each one is dyed in small lots and changes a little, season to season — the way wool was always meant to.

The Otway Mule
A close, warm-toned macro of twin-faced Australian sheepskin.
On materials

The whole point of good wool, as far as we can tell, is to be touched.

We make six things. Three for the foot, three for the room. Each one is cut, pressed, or woven from a wool we can name — not just "wool", but a sheep, a region, a season.

How we make them

The way our customers actually live.

A small gallery of moments from across southern Australia — bed-ends, reading hours, slow Saturdays. Real homes, real wool. The CozyStep things in their natural habitat.

A wood stove and seating area in a quiet Australian living room
Saturday morning · Castlemaine
A made bed with a lambswool throw across the bed-end
Bed-end, all winter
Two reading chairs and a wooden basket of throws
Chairs that take throws
A white wicker chair in soft afternoon light
Reading hour · Hobart
A frosted window in winter morning light
First frost · Halls Gap

Yes, we spell it "Cozy." Everything else here — the wool, the seams, the way it sits on your foot at six in the morning — is properly cosy.

Notes from a slow winter.

A small journal about the things that get worn, repaired, kept. Australian writers, mostly, on what they reach for when the heating won't quite do.

Read the Journal