Journal note

Creator feedback should make the swimwear better.

Salt & Silk Group is building Siren-Silk and Angel-Silk before finished products are available. Any creator, model, or fit-feedback work should support better swimwear decisions, clear consent, and respectful development practices.

Salt & Silk Group still life with silk, salt, stone, and warm coastal light.
Current house still life direction. Real collaboration imagery should be owned, consented, and product-clear once samples are ready.

Adult Collaborators Only

Fit feedback, creator previews, model calls, and campaign work should involve adult collaborators only. Every public or internal use of a person's image, likeness, or feedback should be documented before it is used beyond the original setting.

That standard matters before launch because early brand material can travel quickly across websites, social profiles, pitch notes, and partner conversations. Age confirmation and written releases should be part of the intake process, not added after content is captured.

Useful Feedback Before Public Claims

Good feedback is specific: strap comfort, lining confidence, fabric recovery, movement near water, coverage preference, size notes, and where a silhouette feels strongest or needs restraint. It should improve sample decisions before final product language is written.

Siren-Silk feedback should help refine bold black swimwear with secure, confident construction. Angel-Silk feedback should help refine luminous ivory swimwear with comfort, opacity, and softness in mind.

Local And Coastal Collaboration Fit

The strongest early collaborations will likely come from creators, photographers, boutiques, and resort or bridal vendors who understand coastal styling and slow brand development. Local and Jersey Shore-aligned outreach can be useful when it adds real context instead of empty visibility.

Partnerships should be clear about whether a collaboration is paid, gifted, affiliate-linked, private feedback, early access, or public content. Disclosure language, posting expectations, and image-use rights should be set before content goes live.

What Should Wait

Public product claims, launch promises, reviews, ratings, product schema, and availability language should wait until samples, policies, pricing, and fulfillment details are real. The development stage can still be useful and visible without pretending the first collection is already finished.

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