LEXA GALBI, a textile design and artificial intelligence studio, stands at the threshold between two worlds: intuition, and algorithms capable of opening thousands of possibilities in just moments.
Here, AI is not an anonymous image-producing machine; it acts as a silent amplifier, a system of variation shaped to meet the demands of our time.
Turning away from this alliance today would mean accepting a narrowing of creative possibilities, and allowing others to define the future of these tools alone.
Rejecting AI means choosing a more traditional path, with its strengths… and its limits.
It often implies:
• longer production timelines,
• fewer artistic explorations in a short time frame,
• less space to focus on what truly matters: artistic direction, collection coherence, and dialogue with the brand.
In an industry where fashion houses seek speed, singularity, and depth all at once, not integrating these tools can, in certain professional contexts, become a constraint.
AI will naturally integrate into our processes and reshape our markets.
It will redistribute the cards.
Within this shift, our role as human creators is to elevate our expertise and sensitivity even further.
Choosing not to use a tool capable of accelerating workflows, optimizing production, and freeing time to deepen creative potential may become a real risk.
At the studio, everything begins with an intention:
a drawing
a fragment of reality
or an inner image—precise, yet difficult to articulate.
From there:
1. AI explores
It generates materials, structures, complex atmospheres, and visuals—imagined or inspired by reality.
Results that would be extremely time-consuming, sometimes nearly impossible, to achieve by hand within the same timeframe.
2. The human decides
The studio selects, filters, assembles, and refines.
What resonates is kept; what feels hollow is discarded.
3. The pattern becomes textile
The visuals are reworked, seamlessly repeated, colored, and refined.
Volumes are balanced, breathing spaces preserved, and print-ready files prepared in close collaboration with textile printers.
The final result is not “an AI image.”
It is a constructed textile pattern, a collaboration.
Within this hybrid process, AI proves valuable because it:
identifies emerging trends and analyzes real-time data,
accelerates the exploration of rich atmospheres (mineral, fluid, blurred, luminous),
helps generate coherent variations (colorways, density, scale),
frees time for what machines cannot do: feeling, choosing, storytelling, and connecting ideas.
AI is not a magic wand.
It is a raw-material accelerator, allowing the studio to invest more energy into the quality of vision and gesture.
For creatives, AI is often portrayed as a threat.
LEXA GALBI sees it as an expansion of the creative field.
Less time spent repeating technical operations.
More space to assert a style, an identity, a voice.
Access to visual textures and renderings that would otherwise require multiple disciplines, photography, 3D, digital painting.
The challenge is not to let the machine take over.
The challenge is to reclaim how these tools are used:
either as a force that standardizes taste, or as an amplifier in service of singular sensibilities.
LEXA GALBI, a studio committed to the intersection of textile design and artificial intelligence, is a creative laboratory, ready to shape the aesthetics of tomorrow.