Who we are
A home for the quiet makers of Israeli craft.
Calico exists because Israel makes extraordinary art — and until now, most of it lived in studios nobody visited, on shelves nobody saw, in price lists nobody understood.
A note from the founder
My grandmother kept every postcard.
When I was twelve I inherited a shoebox of her things. Twenty-three hand-painted postcards from artists she had found in tiny galleries along the Dizengoff strip, in studio sales in Jaffa, in one case from a woman who wove tablecloths on a wooden loom in her kitchen in Safed. Each was signed. Each had a price pencilled lightly on the back. None cost more than thirty shekels.
Thirty years later I went looking for that woman with the loom. Her granddaughter still wove. She was still in Safed. She had no website, no online shop, no way for anyone outside of her physical neighbourhood to find her. She told me: "I make about 40 pieces a year. I sell 6. The rest just sit."
Calico started there. For her, and for the other 3,800 Israeli artists like her — people who make extraordinary things at a quiet, human pace, and who have no interest in competing with factories. We built a marketplace where every piece is held in escrow, every artist is verified, and every transaction goes directly to the person who made the thing.
My grandmother's postcards are still in my desk drawer. This is, in some sense, a way of keeping them there — but letting everybody buy new ones.
What we believe
Three things we never compromise
The artist is paid, safely.
Every sale is held in escrow. We don't release funds until the buyer confirms the piece arrived as described. And we pay on time — every single time.
The buyer knows who made it.
Every item on Calico comes with the artist's name, their city, their story, and verification that the work is theirs. No resellers. No drop-shippers. No factories.
The work moves slowly, on purpose.
No algorithmic push for volume. No "growth at all costs". We'd rather have 3,800 artists who love us than 380,000 who tolerate us.
How we got here
The short history of Calico
The idea on a napkin
Kamilla returns from a studio visit in Safed and can't stop thinking about artists who have no way to reach buyers. Starts sketching Calico.
First 40 artists, invite only
Closed beta launches with hand-picked ceramicists, painters, and jewellers from Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and the Negev. Escrow & verification baked in from day one.
Public launch · 380 artists
Calico opens to the public in autumn 2025. First ₪500K in sales within 3 months. Israel-only.
Journal, AI Stylist & international shipping
Calico Journal publishes weekly. AI Stylist launches in private beta. Shipping to US, EU, UK goes live. 3,800 artists onboarded.
What we're working on
Corporate commissions, partnership with galleries & museums, Arabic interface, hand-signed physical editions delivered worldwide.
The Calico team
A small team, mostly in Tel Aviv
Kamilla
Former gallery director. Believes the best art is the kind you don't shout about.
Tomer Bar
Art critic & writer. Visits one studio a week. Has opinions about light.
Shira Levi
Speaks Hebrew, Arabic, English, French. Has personally verified 1,200 of our artists.
Ayelet R.
Runs escrow & disputes. Treats every order as if it were her grandmother's.
Our manifesto
Five things we will not do, ever.
- 01We will not sell mass-produced goods, even if they're "inspired by" Israeli craft.
- 02We will not list any artist whose identity and work authenticity we haven't personally verified.
- 03We will not auto-release payment to sellers — every transaction passes through escrow.
- 04We will not push artists into sales, promotions, or algorithmic games.
- 05We will not be louder than the work itself.
Want to help build this?
We're hiring. We partner. We commission. Reach out — we reply within two days.