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- Long Alpaca Mittens - Indigo
Long Alpaca Mittens - Indigo
SKU:
F156-IN
£39.50
£39.50
Unavailable
per item
By Samantha Holmes
Indigo
Cold hands? These silky soft and super warm, long fingerless alpaca mittens are knitted with 100% alpaca in Samantha Holmes's artisan studio in Peru. They are a generous length and have a fashioned thumbhole and rolled trim. Alpaca fibre is up to 3 times warmer than the same weight of sheep's wool.
100% Alpaca
Length - approx 33cm
Made in Peru
About Samantha Holmes
Samantha Holmes was originally founded in Scotland in 2003 to offer a new ethical lifestyle concept in Alpaca Clothing and Homeware. The company is still owned and run by Samantha from her home on the west coast of Scotland. Originally an Art and Languages graduate from Edinburgh University, Samantha found her first inspiration for luxury fabrics and traditional craftsmanship in Nepal from where she imported cashmere from a small hand weaving cooperative. But it was on discovering alpaca, that she found her niche. Samantha travelled to Peru to connect with small knitting collectives, most of whom she still works with today.
Indigo
Cold hands? These silky soft and super warm, long fingerless alpaca mittens are knitted with 100% alpaca in Samantha Holmes's artisan studio in Peru. They are a generous length and have a fashioned thumbhole and rolled trim. Alpaca fibre is up to 3 times warmer than the same weight of sheep's wool.
100% Alpaca
Length - approx 33cm
Made in Peru
About Samantha Holmes
Samantha Holmes was originally founded in Scotland in 2003 to offer a new ethical lifestyle concept in Alpaca Clothing and Homeware. The company is still owned and run by Samantha from her home on the west coast of Scotland. Originally an Art and Languages graduate from Edinburgh University, Samantha found her first inspiration for luxury fabrics and traditional craftsmanship in Nepal from where she imported cashmere from a small hand weaving cooperative. But it was on discovering alpaca, that she found her niche. Samantha travelled to Peru to connect with small knitting collectives, most of whom she still works with today.