Most cable knit sweaters are not what they claim. Machine-knit cables that flatten after one season. Blended fibers that pill. You have felt the difference between promise and reality — the sweater that loses shape, the cable pattern that disappears.
This is not that.
Pashmina sits below 16 microns. Regular cashmere is 18-19. This sweater is hand-knit in Kathmandu by teams who have worked together for decades — one knitter works the body, another shapes the cables, a third finishes the edges. No single person completes a piece alone.
The cable pattern holds its structure. The fiber compresses when you move, releases when you settle. 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 sweaters use techniques passed between hands rather than written down. The skills are in the muscle memory of dozens of knitters working in cooperative workshops across the Kathmandu Valley.
Honestly? We have seen people buy one of these and immediately order a second in another color. It is hard to explain until it is on your body.
Find your size below.

