Most double woven shawls are not what they claim. Machine-woven at speed. Fibers blended to cut costs. You have felt the difference — the density that feels wrong, the weight that sits heavy, the edges that fray.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. This shawl is hand-loomed in Kathmandu by teams working together — weavers setting the double warp, linkers finishing the complex edges, finishers checking every layer. No single person completes a piece alone.
The double weave creates density without bulk. The two layers trap air for warmth. The size works as a wrap, a blanket, or a layer. It is the kind of piece that becomes essential for cold weather.
The teams making these shawls have worked together for decades in cooperative workshops across the Kathmandu Valley. The skills are passed between hands, not written down.
Honestly? This is the piece that lives in your car, your office, your carry-on. The one you reach for when the temperature drops.
Find yours below.

