Wildfool 100% Alashan cashmere fingerless gloves in natural undyed — overhead flat lay on linen

The Alashan Cashmere Fingerless Glove

Beige
$42.00
Skip to product information
Wildfool 100% Alashan cashmere fingerless gloves in natural undyed — overhead flat lay on linen
1/5

The Alashan Cashmere Fingerless Glove

Your fingers stay free. The rest stays warm.

$42.00
ColorBeige

About this item

The gloves that warm your wrists and leave your fingertips free to type.

100% Alashan cashmere, knit from goats wintering on Inner Mongolia's high plateau where temperatures drop past −30°C (the harsher the climate, the finer the undercoat).

  • 100% Alashan cashmere — goat, not sheep
  • Fingerless design covers palms + wrists, leaves fingertips free
  • Ribbed cuff — stays at the wrist without binding
  • Hand wash cold or machine wash in a mesh bag on gentle

Type through a cold meeting. The wrists stay warm; the screen still works.

What Alashan cashmere actually does for your hands ↓

The Details
  • Material: 100% Alashan Cashmere
  • Construction: Fingerless knit
  • Length: Covers wrist to second knuckle
  • Weight: ~45g per pair
  • Origin: Fiber from Inner Mongolia, knit in China

Hand wash cold with cashmere detergent or a wool-safe shampoo, or machine wash in a mesh bag on gentle. Lay flat to dry — don't hang. Light pilling in the first 2–3 wears is normal; a cashmere comb lifts it. After that, the fiber settles and pills less each season.

The Narrative

You pull them on at the desk and the stiffness goes out of your fingers within a minute. The cashmere is warm against the pulse points on your wrist — where most of the heat loss happens — and light enough at the palm that you stop noticing them. You type. You scroll. You turn a page. Your hands stay warm, your fingertips stay useful.

Alashan cashmere goats grow a finer undercoat because they have no choice — the plateau winters past −30°C demand it. That same fiber region supplies the European luxury houses whose cashmere you've paid a label premium for. The difference isn't the goat; it's what happens after the fiber leaves the plateau.

You need help? /FAQ

Related products