

American Vintage | Boat Neck Alpaca Blend Pullover - Steel Grey Acier-Chine
A relaxed boat neck defines this pullover from AMERICAN VINTAGE, carving a horizontal line that sits wide across the collarbone without slipping from the shoulders. The neckline is the anchor of the piece — generous yet deliberate, it frames the upper body with a quiet ease that resists fussiness. This is a sweater built for the kind of nonchalance that requires precise engineering: the boat neck is cut deep enough to suggest bare skin, but not so deep that it demands constant adjustment. It is the defining gesture of a garment that understands the power of restraint. The knit itself is a study in contradictions resolved. Alpaca and wool form the tactile core, lending a warmth that feels substantial without weight — the fibres trap heat in their hollow cores, making this pullover a genuinely cold-weather piece that breathes. A measured inclusion of polyamide introduces subtle structure, preventing the drape from collapsing into limpness, while elastane provides a gentle recovery that keeps the silhouette intact after hours of wear. The hand is dry and brushed, with a slight halo of surface softness that catches light differently with each movement. In steel grey — a tone that reads as charcoal softened by mist — the sweater absorbs rather than reflects, making it a natural anchor for both sharp tailoring and raw denim. The cut is deliberately voluminous without being sloppy. Shoulders drop into a generous sleeve that skims the arm, while the body falls in a straight, easy column that ends at the high hip. This is not a cropped silhouette nor an oversized one; it occupies a middle ground where fabric has room to move without overwhelming the frame. The construction is clean — ribbing at the cuffs and hem is minimal, just enough to hold the shape without introducing visual clutter. The alpaca content gives the knit a slight loft, so the fabric stands away from the body just slightly, creating a negative space that reads as effortless rather than bulky. Movement here is fluid. The sweater swings with a walk, folds into soft creases when the arm bends, and resettles without clinging. It works across seasons as a transitional layer — substantial enough for early winter, breathable enough for a chilly spring evening. Style it tucked loosely into high-waisted wool trousers for a studio-to-dinner ease, or let it hang untucked over raw-hem denim and leather boots. For a sharper proposition, layer it over a fine cotton collared shirt with the collar left open, the boat neck revealing a sliver of the shirt’s placket. It is a piece that asks nothing of you but delivers everything.
Original: $27.42
-65%$27.42
$9.60Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A relaxed boat neck defines this pullover from AMERICAN VINTAGE, carving a horizontal line that sits wide across the collarbone without slipping from the shoulders. The neckline is the anchor of the piece — generous yet deliberate, it frames the upper body with a quiet ease that resists fussiness. This is a sweater built for the kind of nonchalance that requires precise engineering: the boat neck is cut deep enough to suggest bare skin, but not so deep that it demands constant adjustment. It is the defining gesture of a garment that understands the power of restraint. The knit itself is a study in contradictions resolved. Alpaca and wool form the tactile core, lending a warmth that feels substantial without weight — the fibres trap heat in their hollow cores, making this pullover a genuinely cold-weather piece that breathes. A measured inclusion of polyamide introduces subtle structure, preventing the drape from collapsing into limpness, while elastane provides a gentle recovery that keeps the silhouette intact after hours of wear. The hand is dry and brushed, with a slight halo of surface softness that catches light differently with each movement. In steel grey — a tone that reads as charcoal softened by mist — the sweater absorbs rather than reflects, making it a natural anchor for both sharp tailoring and raw denim. The cut is deliberately voluminous without being sloppy. Shoulders drop into a generous sleeve that skims the arm, while the body falls in a straight, easy column that ends at the high hip. This is not a cropped silhouette nor an oversized one; it occupies a middle ground where fabric has room to move without overwhelming the frame. The construction is clean — ribbing at the cuffs and hem is minimal, just enough to hold the shape without introducing visual clutter. The alpaca content gives the knit a slight loft, so the fabric stands away from the body just slightly, creating a negative space that reads as effortless rather than bulky. Movement here is fluid. The sweater swings with a walk, folds into soft creases when the arm bends, and resettles without clinging. It works across seasons as a transitional layer — substantial enough for early winter, breathable enough for a chilly spring evening. Style it tucked loosely into high-waisted wool trousers for a studio-to-dinner ease, or let it hang untucked over raw-hem denim and leather boots. For a sharper proposition, layer it over a fine cotton collared shirt with the collar left open, the boat neck revealing a sliver of the shirt’s placket. It is a piece that asks nothing of you but delivers everything.






















