The humble shetland is a firm favourite, I know. But does anyone ever wear a cashmere crew neck jumper? Colours? With a sportcoat?
Or are they just a bit 'flat'?
Last edited by colin (2012-07-12 15:26:28)
Last edited by Richard Bergman (2012-07-12 15:57:19)
Good call, we used to stock Johnstone Cashmere and they are lovely, we've moved over to an Italian brand and they're not as nice.
R.i.p. Peter Scott!
They still trade!
Oh, I thought they were dead! Always happy to get corrected.
The collection doesn't look to exciting mind... I was trying to find a nice blue shawl collar if anyone knows of any leads?
I think their Mill closed but someone bought the name.
Johnstones is fairly close by me Bop and I think they have a big sale on all knitwear at the House of Bruar who stock lots of good stuff. I think I'll be passing in a few weeks. I'll keep you informed. I'll probably go and have a look for myself anyway.
Just treated myself to a Johnstone cashmere v-neck, inspired by a long-delayed viewing of 'Funny Face'.
As The Guv'Nor - and Kay Thompson - had it, 'Think Pink'.
Peter Scott were also mentioned in this thread. I've been tempted - but there are, when it comes to knitwear, a number of names to be tempted by. Good value for money, though, I think, Peter Scott, perhaps a deal better than contemporary Alan Paine. I know Chiltern Street is still stocking Paine but I can no longer feel any excitement for it unless it's vintage (often, in that instance, from the USA and consequently overpriced).
Barrie for House of Bruar. Three ply Todd and Duncan yarn from Scotland.
V neck. I don’t like cashmere in a crew neck. Garnet red.
Would buy dark amethyst but out of stock for long periods. I don’t care for many of the other colours.
Peter Scott might well be next on my list. Knitwear is my weakness much as shoes are with some on here.
Bop was in the trade, was he not? Johnstone are very handsome indeed.
95% of my jumpers are made-in-Scotland from cashmere. I like cashmere so much that it is difficult to wear normal wool...wool makes me feel like l am roughing it. I only buy normal wool when l have no other choice. The good cashmere is very expensive, but it is worth it. If a man is going to do knitwear he must do it properly and wear cashmere.
Cashmere jumpers are like socks, they can't be skimped on. Gotta get cashmere jumpers that are beefy and made from cashmere that does not pill much, and that costs a lot of money.
Last edited by The_Shooman (2022-05-13 02:51:02)
^ A man of style speaks out about the luxurious feeling of the cashmere sweater. I'm wearing one right now, one of two Alan Paine bought from the USA when you didn't need a second mortgage to benefit from Ebay Com. 2008, I think. It's slowly on its way out but has lasted longer than Scottish-made L.L.Bean bought three years or so later.
Shooey is even more spot on about socks: especially for the older male. When indifferently made... ouch... Wearing badly constructed socks is as annoying as someone not getting your haircut quite right or that grease spot on your Oxford shirt.
The Shooman's definitely right there. There's cashmere and there's cashmere, And like merino, it seems to have flooded the high street at some alarmingly cheap prices. Being Australian, he'll be well aware of how the wool industry works there.
I picked up a cashmere from Zara, wrongly ticketed at £9.99, it's ok but has piled very badly. Only good really as an extra insulating layer. Not to be worn proudly.
Also an S Fisher, thick (I reckon at least 10 ply) fishermans style cashmere from a charity shop at around a fiver. God knows how old it is but looks and feels brand new. The rub is it's a kind of mustard colour. If I could find one like that in navy I could probably out all my other knitwear.
Navy blue is, arguably, the Ivy colour par excellence, especially when it comes to cords, polo shirts, knitwear, knitted ties and possibly - if you can bear to have such an item on your back in 2022 - the G9 and G4. Socks, too - mustn't forget socks.
But mustard - mustard is good.
Now yellow - once worn in this quarter then disdained - is somewhat back in favour with me. I used to wear a rather startling yellow Pringle sweater circa 2006, then bought a yellow Brooks cardigan (also quite startling). Then I entered discussions with Pad Nahman (via e-mail) on colour - specifically in knitwear - and rather followed his lead for a while. So navy, charcoal, various shades of dark green and maroon/burgundy predominated. Many colours remain a no-no in knitwear (as well as in other items) but a Sam Fisher in mustard I would wear very gladly with an old pair of 501s and probably desert boots during early spring.
Yes. That’s pretty much what I put it with. It seems to suit a slightly worn look best.
For me, darker natural greens run a great second place to navy for knitwear.
I’ve been having strange cravings for a very pale pastel yellow shetland for a while now. Very much on the back burner. If for no other reason than that I don’t think they actually exist.
Off-white McGeorge on this morning: v-neck over a USA-made B.D.Baggie shirt. I fancy I heard the oldd wolf-whistle. It may not have been directed at me of course.
Now - and I would like to hear our Shooey on this subject - Alan Paine (very, very 'vintage', I assure you), Brooks, McGeorge and something I've forgotten the name of but is Scottish do not feel as gorgeously luxurious - even 'femmy' as Frosty might have had it - as Johnstone Of Elgin. I snagged another of these on Ebay last evening for under £30 with modest postage. Maroon v-neck. Said by the seller to be for a lady but sized L. If it doesn't work out, well, I shall offer it to a male with more pronounced moobs than I.
I almost went for a 'Brora' navy crew neck about an hour ago - then decided I was not about to shell out fifty-plus quid for something with a hole in one sleeve.
But I think they were once favoured by The Weejun.