Clothing Designed for Special People.

Adult & elderly easy-dressing — seven adaptive prototypes exploring dignified, independent dressing for people with limited mobility, dexterity or strength. Preliminary, and awaiting co-design validation.

Designed by Saif Ali Mamun, Creative Head  ·  Gateway to Global Excellence

Why Adaptive

A Large, Underserved & Growing Need.

Most adaptive clothing is produced by small speciality brands at high price points, with limited availability and no ethical supply-chain transparency. There is no large-scale, co-designed, ethically sourced adaptive clothing line serving the North American mass market.

That is the opportunity Nordic Bridge is positioned to develop — if we do the co-design work first.

"Design from the realities people describe — not from what we assume they need."
Of Canadian persons with disabilities say clothing access is a challenge
0 %
Global market share — the largest region worldwide
0 %
US adults living with disability (CDC)
0 M+

Sources: Fortune Business Insights (2025) · CDC Disability Data (2023) · March of Dimes Canada (2021)

 
Adult & Elderly Easy-Dressing

All Prototypes. One Purpose.

Every closure is concealed, every mechanism one-handed where possible — each garment looks like standard clothing and dresses like nothing else. Shown in both closed and open states.

 

Woven Check Shirt

Both-Side Opening

Full side velcro

Opens flat from hem to underarm — no arm-raising required.

Button-down collar

Magnetic-backed collar for easy one-handed fastening.

Designed for

Limited shoulder ROM

Post-stroke

One-arm use

Denim Shirt

Magnetic Snap Placket

One-touch fastening

Magnetic snaps behind standard-looking buttons.

No fine motor needed

Works with one hand or wearing gloves.

Designed for

Arthritis

Tremors

Limited grip strength

Woven Check Shirt B

Full Side-Zip — Heavier Weight

Full side zip

Heavier-duty zip — for seated or lying-down dressing.

Button-down collar

Magnetic-backed collar for easy one-handed fastening.

Designed for

Wheelchair users

Bed dressing

Caregiver-assisted

Jersey T-Shirt

Open-Shoulder Seams

Shoulder seams open

Press-studs release fully — arm slides in from above.

No overhead movement

Eliminates the need to raise arms at all.

Designed for

Wheelchair users

Bed dressing

Caregiver-assisted

Corduroy Shirt

Side Snap + Snap Cuffs

Side snap seam

Full-length press-studs — the shirt lifts away cleanly.

Snap cuffs

Replaces buttons — works one-handed, no threading.

Designed for

Elderly adults

Cold weather

Independent dressing

Navy Twill Trouser

Full Side Zip

Hip-to-ankle zip on the outer seam

Opens flat for transfer — dressing without standing.

Designed for

Wheelchair users

Prosthetics

Hip surgery

Grey Jersey Trouser

Side Snap Seam

Press-studs on both legs

Shown seated — easy on and off without standing.

Designed for

Long-term wheelchair users

Hospital discharge

Where This Comes From

Inclusion Is Who We Are — Not a New Direction.

For years, our team has worked alongside persons with disabilities in garment factories — not as a CSR exercise, but as a genuine belief that skilled people deserve skilled work, regardless of disability.

Working with disabled people in our factories, we saw every day how poorly standard clothing served them. That observation, from years of direct experience, is what brought us to adaptive design.

"We did not enter adaptive clothing because it is a trend. We entered because we have spent years working with disabled people, watching them succeed when given the chance — and noticing how their clothing made that harder than it needed to be."

— Nordic Bridge Limited

Persons with disabilities recruited and employed across textile and garment factories
0 %
Years of inclusive workforce experience
0 +

Recognised for Inclusive Skills Development

Platinum Winner — Inclusive Skills Development (STAR Factory)

2nd Social and Environmental Excellence Award, 2014 — an inclusive workforce initiative led by Ahmed Abdul Kabir Chowdhury, Head of Operations & Compliance.

Partners in the field: CDD Bangladesh and CRP — assistive devices, awareness building, and recruitment and job matching.

 
Our Approach

What That Experience Taught Us.

Start with lived experience

Design from the realities people describe, not from what we assume they need.

Accommodate

Adapt the environment, tools, and tasks so people can take part on equal terms.

Train & raise awareness

Build understanding across teams so inclusion is shared, not delegated.

Lean on partners

Work alongside specialist organizations who hold knowledge we do not.

Match thoughtfully

Pair people, roles, and solutions with care rather than by default.

Build systems

Turn one-off efforts into durable processes that outlast a single project.

From Idea to Responsible Development

Evidence First. Product Second.

We hold Collection 01 as a set of hypotheses — and we are open to being redirected by evidence and community guidance.

STEP 01

Discovery

Learn from lived experience, clinicians, and existing research to ground our understanding of real needs and gaps.

STEP 02

Co-design advisory

Convene an advisory group — community, design, and clinical voices — to shape priorities and guardrails together.

STEP 03

Focused first concept

Develop one carefully chosen concept, applying our apparel capability where it genuinely helps, and test it with real wearers.

Working with AFAC (KITE / UHN), occupational therapists, and people with lived experience — where evidence, not assumption, determines whether and how a concept advances.

Adaptive Design

Ready to Co-Design Together?

If you are a community organisation, occupational therapist, clinician, retailer — or a person with lived experience — we want your guidance before anything goes into production.

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