Most long cardigans are not what they claim. Machine-knit at speed. Fibers blended to cut costs. You have felt the difference between promise and reality — the cardigan that loses shape, the pockets that gap, the fabric that pills after two wears.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. Regular cashmere is 18-19. This cardigan is hand-loomed in Kathmandu by teams working together — weavers setting the warp, linkers finishing the edges, finishers checking every seam. No single person completes a piece alone.
The 4-ply construction holds its shape. The shawl collar frames without gaping. The pockets are deep enough for gloves and your phone. It is the kind of piece that works as outerwear in fall and a layer in winter — versatile enough to justify the space it takes in your closet.
The teams making these cardigans have worked together for decades in cooperative workshops across the Kathmandu Valley. The skills are passed between hands, not written down. Each piece passes through multiple hands before it reaches you.
Honestly? This is the piece customers buy and then buy again in another color. The one that becomes the default layer for everything.
Hem hits below the knee. One size accommodates most. Find your fit below.