Free Women's Cashmere Cable Pom

$0.00 $150.00

Delivery Late Spring

It is possible that no other piece of ski equipment delivers the perfect blend of utility and style as that of a knitted hat or cap. Serving to offer warmth from the winter elements, the ski hat is a classic cold weather essential whose simple performance characteristics have made it an enduring companion to skiers for ages. While other alpine garments are surely needed for a day on the mountain, none can match the universal comfort and timeless appeal of a product such as the W’s Cable Pom Hat. Crafted with robust, heavy gauge & ultra-soft cashmere-merino blended fibers and including a combination of traditional knitwear motifs including chevron, seed stitching, cables, and classic ribbing, this nostalgic headwear piece is capped with eco-friendly faux fur pom elevating its taste & fashionable expression. Designed to celebrate the romantic origins of alpine sport, this considered cap is ideal for on-piste and off-piste wear occasions as a compliment to Alps & Meters’ tailored, technical, and timeless garments and handsome head-to-toe ensembles. 
Color: Navy

Features & Benefits

Italian Craft & Quality

Made in Italy with light & luxurious merino fibers and a traditional 3 button placket this menswear staple command first class craftsmanship lending handsome taste & longevity tthis warm weather garment.

Alpine Tradition

First the unfirom of the polo and grass tennis grounds and therafter dopted by the Founding members of the Kandahar Club of Murren, Switzerand, this alpine polo echos the

Fit for Spring & Summer

Spring & Summer sleeveless presentation & fit is a liberation from the cold of winter and a cut ideal for smart warm weather wear occassions.

THE STORY

First held in January 1928, the inaugural Inferno Race took place when 19 members of Kandahar Ski Club climbed the Schilthorn (2,970m) above Mürren, Switzerland to race down the 2,100 meters to Lauterbrunnen, 14 kilometres away. A journey of almost 10 miles (15 km) and nearly 5 times the length of contemporary downhill Olympic courses, the Inferno was an alpine event whose novelty and legitimate physical and mental obstacles created powerful appeal to the growing racing class cut from the cloth of the Kandahar’s expansive blanket of accelerating British influence.