
Cold Breaker | Pepitko Wool Vest - Straight Cut Light-Grey
A straight-cut vest that trades the expected softness of knitwear for the rigorous, honest texture of Irish wool. Cold Breaker’s Pepitko vest arrives with a deliberate lack of fuss—its silhouette is generous without being oversized, a roomy column that skims the body rather than gripping it. The grey is the colour of a winter sky over the Aran Islands: muted, mineral, and utterly without sentiment. This is not a piece that asks for attention; it commands it through material integrity alone. The wool itself tells the story. Sourced from the historic Yoko Wool House, renowned for its heritage in Irish woollens, the fabric carries a dry, nubbly hand that feels almost architectural to the touch. There is a slight crackle when you move, a reminder that this is a cloth bred for Atlantic gales, not heated boutiques. The weave is dense enough to hold structure, yet the vest drapes with a quiet fluidity at the hem and armholes—a paradox of rigidity and ease that makes it feel both protective and liberating. Construction is precise to the point of severity. Bound edges trace the neckline, armholes, and front placket with a clean, almost industrial finish, while a full-length zip closure runs straight down the centre, its matte hardware refusing to glint. Two patch pockets sit low on the hips, their placement grounding the vest in a utilitarian logic that echoes workwear traditions. The straight cut means the hem falls cleanly at the high hip, neither cropped nor elongated, striking a proportion that works equally well over a lean fine-gauge knit or a crisply tailored poplin shirt. Movement is surprisingly free. The sleeveless architecture liberates the arms and shoulders, allowing the vest to swing open or zip closed as the temperature dictates. There is a weight to the wool that anchors the piece without dragging it down—a gravity that feels reassuring rather than burdensome. In cooler months, it layers seamlessly over a turtleneck or a heavy flannel; come spring, it can sit alone over bare skin, the wool’s texture providing all the visual interest a look requires. Styling this vest is an exercise in restraint. Let it be the focal point: pair it with a white poplin shirt and wide-leg trousers for a study in tonal grey, or throw it over a charcoal rollneck and raw denim for a more rugged urbanity. The pockets invite a hand, a phone, a folded newspaper. This is a garment for the days when you want to feel the weight of good cloth against your ribs—a quiet, confident piece that asks nothing of you but presence. Wear it open, wear it closed. The wool will do the rest.
Original: $13.14
-65%$13.14
$4.60Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A straight-cut vest that trades the expected softness of knitwear for the rigorous, honest texture of Irish wool. Cold Breaker’s Pepitko vest arrives with a deliberate lack of fuss—its silhouette is generous without being oversized, a roomy column that skims the body rather than gripping it. The grey is the colour of a winter sky over the Aran Islands: muted, mineral, and utterly without sentiment. This is not a piece that asks for attention; it commands it through material integrity alone. The wool itself tells the story. Sourced from the historic Yoko Wool House, renowned for its heritage in Irish woollens, the fabric carries a dry, nubbly hand that feels almost architectural to the touch. There is a slight crackle when you move, a reminder that this is a cloth bred for Atlantic gales, not heated boutiques. The weave is dense enough to hold structure, yet the vest drapes with a quiet fluidity at the hem and armholes—a paradox of rigidity and ease that makes it feel both protective and liberating. Construction is precise to the point of severity. Bound edges trace the neckline, armholes, and front placket with a clean, almost industrial finish, while a full-length zip closure runs straight down the centre, its matte hardware refusing to glint. Two patch pockets sit low on the hips, their placement grounding the vest in a utilitarian logic that echoes workwear traditions. The straight cut means the hem falls cleanly at the high hip, neither cropped nor elongated, striking a proportion that works equally well over a lean fine-gauge knit or a crisply tailored poplin shirt. Movement is surprisingly free. The sleeveless architecture liberates the arms and shoulders, allowing the vest to swing open or zip closed as the temperature dictates. There is a weight to the wool that anchors the piece without dragging it down—a gravity that feels reassuring rather than burdensome. In cooler months, it layers seamlessly over a turtleneck or a heavy flannel; come spring, it can sit alone over bare skin, the wool’s texture providing all the visual interest a look requires. Styling this vest is an exercise in restraint. Let it be the focal point: pair it with a white poplin shirt and wide-leg trousers for a study in tonal grey, or throw it over a charcoal rollneck and raw denim for a more rugged urbanity. The pockets invite a hand, a phone, a folded newspaper. This is a garment for the days when you want to feel the weight of good cloth against your ribs—a quiet, confident piece that asks nothing of you but presence. Wear it open, wear it closed. The wool will do the rest.




















