Most cashmere scarves are not what they claim. Machine-woven at speed. Fibers blended with wool to cut costs. You have felt the difference — the scarf that loses softness, the edges that fray, the drape that sits wrong.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. Regular cashmere is 18-19. This scarf is hand-loomed in Kathmandu by teams working together — weavers setting the warp and throwing the shuttle, linkers finishing the edges, finishers checking every thread. No single person completes a piece alone.
The 2-ply construction holds its structure. The fiber drapes correctly around the neck. The size works tied, wrapped, or draped. It is the kind of piece that becomes yours after the first wear — familiar, reliable, something you reach for without thinking.
The teams making these scarves 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 scarf customers buy in multiples. One for themselves. One for someone they love. One to keep in the drawer for when the first two are in the wash.
Dimensions: 28 x 54 inches. Find yours below.

