Our Story
A new era
of hair.
Késhera exists for a child no one has built a product for.
Around 2.2 million people worldwide live with Alopecia Areata. About half of them are in the early, patchy stage — small bald spots, half an inch to a few inches across, that don't yet require a full wig but are visible enough to attract stares, questions, and unkind words at school.
For the parents of these kids, the choices are brutal. You can do nothing — and watch your child's confidence quietly shrink. Or you can spend $1,000 to $4,000 on a full custom wig your child doesn't really need yet. Most families find themselves frozen between the two.
The gap nobody fills
The hair-replacement industry is built around adults and around advanced hair loss. Their products, their prices, their fittings, their language — none of it is made for an eight-year-old with one patch the size of a quarter. We built Késhera to fit exactly there.
What a Késhera patch is
Each Késhera patch is a small piece of breathable medical-grade lace, hand-knotted with ethically sourced human hair, designed to be attached to a child's scalp with hypoallergenic daily-wear adhesive. It is trim-to-fit, ready to wear, and made in three sizes for the earliest stages of Alopecia Areata.
A patch isn't a wig. It doesn't try to be. It's a small, soft, almost invisible answer to a small, soft, almost invisible problem — one that, to the child wearing it, doesn't feel small at all.
Why "Késh-Era"
Kesh is the Sanskrit word for hair. Era is the time we live in. Késhera — Kesh-Era — is the new era of hair: one where a child's confidence isn't held hostage by the size of their family's budget, and where care meets them at the very first patch, not after years of waiting.
"Regain confidence in every strand."
— Késhera