Most plaid wraps are not what they claim. Machine-woven at speed. Dye that bleeds. You have felt the difference — the colors that fade unevenly, the pattern that distorts.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. This wrap is hand-loomed in Kathmandu by teams working together — weavers setting the warp and throwing the shuttle, dyers matching colors to the original plaid, linkers finishing the edges. No single person completes a piece alone.
The plaid pattern holds its alignment. The colors are matched by eye, not algorithm. The fiber drapes rather than clings. It is the kind of piece that works as a wrap, a scarf, or a layer — versatile enough for travel or everyday.
The teams making these wraps 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 people notice from across the room. The plaid gets compliments without demanding attention.
Find yours below.

