How Dijana Bucalo is Stitching to Success

Leaving behind war-torn Bosnia, a designer has created a successful life and business in metro Detroit.
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Bucalo, at her Royal Oak design studio, is wearing one of her creations. Note the unique hemline. // Photograph by Sal Rodriguez

When Dijana and Nikola Bucalo and their 8-year-old daughter, Minja, first stepped onto Detroit turf in 1996, they had no idea what type of life was
in store for them. They did know that they needed to get away from their home country, war-torn Bosnia-Herzegovina.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 see a future there,鈥 Dijana Bucalo says. She joined hundreds of thousands (including her parents, who moved to Texas and then Hamtramck) who fled the Western Balkan country to escape uncertainty.

Clasping just two bags full of clothes, some items for Minja, and $100, the Bucalos first settled in Hamtramck in an apartment with family who had just moved there and had been told it was a good place to start a new life.

Given her extraordinary sewing skills, it wasn鈥檛 long before Bucalo turned to seamstress work to make ends meet.

鈥淚 grew up making things. That鈥檚 what you did in southeast Europe,鈥 Bucalo says. 鈥淵our relatives, your mom, you just sat around every afternoon doing some type of handiwork.鈥

Over time, she learned English. 鈥淭hose days were tough. Not only did we not have extra money to do anything with, but we didn鈥檛 even know where to buy thread, let alone fabric.鈥

This 100% cotton dress is one-size, like most of Dijana Bucalo鈥檚 designs. // Photograph by Sal Rodriguez

During her time working in Midtown Detroit at the , a great deal of her work involved creating performance costumes for Irish dancers, circus performers, acrobats, folk dancers, and others. 鈥淭he demand for the performing community was really big then,鈥 she says.

She also whipped up custom apparel and, in time, designed her own line
of dresses and tops under her label. Her client base grew, and it was apparent she鈥檇 need to learn more about running a small business, so she took business classes at ACCESS (the nonprofit ).

In 2013, the couple moved to a charming two-story home in Royal Oak. The following year, Bucalo won the $10K Challenge presented by the . Part of that program included her teaching people how to use commercial sewing machines and how to become professional sewers.

Nikola, an electrician who鈥檚 extremely handy, built, with the help of a friend, a home studio for his wife behind their house, and Minja 鈥 who has a master鈥檚 degree in interior design 鈥 did the design work.

Today, is a modern, professional facility with sewing machines; dress forms; racks of stylish, cutting-edge apparel; and more.
Beyond costume creations, Bucalo has medical-industry clients, for example, for whom she creates colostomy waistband accessories and interior designers who call on her for decorative pieces like high- end accent pillows and table linens.

Bucalo鈥檚 favorite fabrics are of natural fibers, like cotton, linen, and silk. She has a passion for asymmetrical cuts and loves working with whites, blacks, and grays and very bright yellows, blues, reds, and greens. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like muted colors.鈥

Though she admits that her designs aren鈥檛 for everyone, Bucalo has gained quite a following. In fact, sometimes when people visit her studio, they鈥檒l see a fabric and, not sure what she鈥檒l do with it, say they want whatever she makes from it. 鈥淢y designs can be quirky and different, but each has my soul in it.鈥


This story originally appeared in the November 2024 issue of 黑料网 Detroit magazine. To read more, pick up a copy of 黑料网 Detroit at a local retail outlet. Our will be available on Nov. 6.