This Student’s Clothing Company Is Dyed in the Wool of Ancient Cusco

Alpacas running between rocks

The UVA student who founded Paka Apparel is bringing alpaca wool and traditional Incan weaving to the American market with a new line of clothing for an active lifestyle. (Photo courtesy of Paka Apparel)

In 2015, University of Virginia student Kris Cody came back from a trip through the Andes Mountains with an alpaca wool sweater – and the seed of an idea for a clothing company.

Two years later, he’s built a production line for Paka Apparel and raised more than $127,000 in a week – roughly six times his initial goal – on the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter.

It all started on a quiet morning in Peru.

As the first rays of sunlight were seeping into the sky over Cusco, Cody watched drowsily from a bus window while the former Incan capital began to bustle with activity. He was struck by a woman walking toward the market carrying a heavy bundle of corn over her shoulder with one arm and propping a young child on her hip with the other.

Kris Cody headshot

Kris Cody is a third-year neuroscience major and the founder of Paka Apparel. (Photo by Dan Addison, University Communications)

“It was barely 5 a.m. and she’d already collected all her goods to go sell that day and was working and caring for a child at the same time. I saw that a lot while I was in Cusco – women who didn’t have many other options besides heavy manual labor, with little payoff,” he said.

Cody, now a third-year student majoring in neuroscience, was traveling and working throughout South America on a pre-college gap year at the time. In the days he spent in Cusco, he saw that many women there were talented artisans skilled in traditional Incan weaving techniques, but they had a limited market and resources to practice their craft. Instead, it was a side business for many in addition to selling crops and other goods.

He was impressed the first time he touched the soft alpaca wool and bought a sweater from a local weaver before leaving Cusco.

Woman from an Andean village weaving in her home

Traditional Incan weavers have used alpaca wool for thousands of years because of its durability and unique temperature regulation properties. (Photo courtesy of Paka Apparel)

“The image of that woman hustling to the market that morning really stuck with me for the rest of the trip and the alpaca wool sweater was a constant reminder of Cusco,” he said. “The sweater fit the lifestyle I was living perfectly through all these different terrains and days of travel; the actual fiber has so much capability for that.”

Alpacas have evolved over thousands of years to suit the harsh climate in the Andes, with wool that helps keep them comfortable during nights that can reach sub-zero temperatures and days where the thermometer climbs past 80 degrees. The fibers are three times lighter than sheep’s wool, but with hollow air pockets that help hold in heat. The only natural fiber that’s warmer than alpaca wool is polar bear fur.

When Cody arrived at UVA, his fellow students took notice of the unique soft fabric every time he wore his sweater from Cusco. Many had never felt alpaca wool before and they always asked where he got it. He began to think more seriously about ways to bring traditionally Incan-woven clothing to the United States.

“After my first year, I bought a one-way ticket to Cusco. I had no idea what it would turn into, but just began going back to the artisan markets with my rusty Spanish and trying to learn more,” Cody said. “Last summer it was just a dream. I was designing the initial round of sweaters. Every single morning, I’d go over and meet with the Chaskis, a family of weavers outside Cusco. We’d cook eggs together and work on prototypes. It was really a shared vision.”

Part of Cody’s vision was to use an apparel company he started to provide skilled, high-paying job options to women weavers in the area. With the Chaskis, he set up a small early network of Incan weavers – traditionally women – bringing together artisans who had preserved their craft over generations and working with them to create a new market for their goods.

After a summer of trial and error with his colleagues in Peru, Cody returned to the United States just before the start of his second year with a bundle of prototypes. He asked for help from friends and family to begin photographing the clothing and setting up a website for Paka Apparel.

He also began seeking out “influencers” to help test and promote the first round of Paka sweaters. He sought people known for global travels and active lifestyles, like pro surfer Leah Dawson and U.S. snowboarding team member Chase Josey, and asked them to try out the sweaters.

On a whim, he reached out to Chance the Rapper’s manager to see if the Grammy Award-winning artist, famous for his independence and unique style, might be interested in trying an early Paka prototype.

Grey alpaca sweatshirt

Paka’s sweaters are extremely light – less than 10 ounces – and as soft as cashmere. (Photo courtesy of Paka Apparel)

“His team invited me up to his show that day in D.C. and I got to spend some time with him talking about our work,” Cody said. “It was one of the most spontaneous things I’ve ever done and we ended up designing a custom three, because that’s his logo, on the back of one of the sweaters for him.”

As Cody continued networking with creative influencers like Chance the Rapper, he turned to UVA’s i.Lab for additional help in getting his business off the Ground. He applied and was accepted to the i.Lab’s prestigious summer incubator.

“The i.Lab has been really supportive. I feel very fortunate for the mentors that I’ve been paired with who have been so helpful. One has helped with branding and the video, another is running my distribution, and I’ve even gained an emotional life coach,” he said. “I’m so grateful to have met these people through the i.Lab and have them there to answer questions.”

Today, Paka Apparel is officially in the launch phase and is taking its first major round of orders through its Kickstarter campaign. Cody keeps in regular contact with all the weavers in the ground in Peru and is taking a semester off to be sure every piece of production and shipment is working seamlessly before he returns to his studies in the spring.

“I’ve bootstrapped everything up to this point, so it’s very important to me that things are set in the right place with the right relationships as we move forward,” he said. “I’m still amazed at how many people have fronted their own time and energy just to be part of this.”

baby alpaca standing between rocks

Alpaca fiber has hollow air pockets that help retain heat and is considered hypoallergenic because it doesn’t contain lanolin – the grease found in other wools that causes itching. (Photo courtesy of Paka Apparel)

Media Contact

Katie McNally

Office of University Communications