The last pagan goddess
of Europe.
The forest goddess
Before Christianity reached the Baltic, there was Medeinė — goddess of the deep forest, mistress of wolves, protector of the hunt. While the rest of Europe converted, Lithuania held its old gods in the trees. Until 1387, this land was the last pagan nation in Europe.
Her shrines were not temples. They were groves. Open clearings in the forest where rituals happened under the sky. King Mindaugas — the only crowned king of Lithuania — offered her the first spoils of every hunt, even after his Christian baptism.
A bronze statue of Medeinė stands in a courtyard on Stiklių Street in Vilnius, seated on a bear. We pass it often.
What we make
MEDEINĖ is a clothing brand from Vilnius. We make small batches of heavyweight basics — hoodies, tees, pants, caps — designed to last and improve with wear.
Each drop is named, finite, and deliberate. When a piece sells out, it stays gone. There are no second runs, no restocks, no resurrections of last season.
How we make it
Every garment is cut and sewn in Lithuania. Fabrics are sourced from European mills — primarily Portugal, Turkey, and local Baltic suppliers. We work with small ateliers, not factories. The people who make our clothes know our names.
Drops happen when they're ready. We don't follow seasons. We don't chase trends.
"Clothing is not decoration. It is the membrane between you and the world."