Most cardigans lose their shape after one season. The front droops. The sleeves stretch. You find yourself pulling at it all day, adjusting, smoothing. You stop reaching for it.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. Regular cashmere is 18-19. This cardigan took three days to knit — the open-front draped by hand, the ribbed cuffs formed with tension that holds. The result keeps its structure through years.
It is the kind of thing you will throw over a tee in September, wear to dinner in December, and keep at your desk year-round. It becomes yours — softer with each wear, shaped to your movement.
Anjali has been knitting for twenty years. She has a small scar on her left thumb from a needle when she was learning. That is what this cardigan represents — a specific woman in Kathmandu who made this specific piece.
Honestly? We have seen people buy two — one for home, one for the office.
Find your size below.






