Most crew neck sweaters are not what they claim. Machine-knit at speed. Fibers blended to cut costs. You have felt the difference between promise and reality — the sweater that pills after two wears, the neckline that loses shape, the fabric that feels like wool, not cashmere.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. Regular cashmere is 18-19. Each piece is hand-knit in Kathmandu by teams working together — one knitter works the body, another finishes the edges, a third checks every seam. No single person completes a piece alone.
The crew neck sits clean without gaping. The fiber drapes rather than clings. It is the kind of piece that works under a blazer for meetings or on its own for weekends — reliable, familiar, something you stop thinking about because it simply works.
The teams making these sweaters 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 customers buy in multiples. One for the office. One for travel. One that lives in the drawer because someone keeps borrowing it.
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