



FROM FUTURE | Cropped Cashmere Pullover in Cosmic-Pink
This cropped pullover from FROM FUTURE cuts a deliberate, modern silhouette—its abbreviated hemline is the first signal that this is knitwear built for movement, not stillness. The cosmic-pink ground is bisected by multicolored bands that race across the sleeves, a graphic interruption that feels less like decoration and more like a pulse. It is a sweater that announces its intentions immediately: this is not about retreating into softness, but about wearing softness as a form of forward momentum. The hand is the second revelation. Four-thread 100% cashmere—a weight that lands with substance rather than flimsiness, yet yields to the touch with the dense, almost buttery compression that only a generous ply count can deliver. There is no scratch, no airy gap in the knit; the fabric holds its shape with a quiet authority, the ribbed edges at the neck, cuffs, and hem cinching just enough to frame the body without gripping it. This is cashmere that feels like armor in cashmere’s clothing: protective, warm, and improbably light for its solidity. Fit is the third act. Regular through the shoulders and chest, the pullover then breaks cleanly at the natural waist, leaving a deliberate pause between hem and hip. That crop is not a trend gesture—it is a proportional tool. It lengthens the line of the torso when worn high, or layers cleanly over a tucked tee without adding bulk. The round neck sits high enough to stand alone, low enough to reveal a collarbone or the edge of a fine chain. Long sleeves end at the wrist bone, ribbed to stay put, not to bunch. In motion, the sweater moves with the body rather than against it. The stripes—a constellation of color that shifts with each arm lift—become kinetic, catching light and attention without shouting. This is a piece that works from desk to dinner to departure gate, equally at home under a wool coat on a cold morning or over a bare back on an unseasonably warm evening. Its season is the long one: autumn through early spring, with a stopover in air-conditioned summer. Style it with a simple white t-shirt peeking from beneath the crop, wide-legged trousers in cream or charcoal, and a clean sneaker. Let the sweater do the talking—the rest of the wardrobe should listen.
Original: $41.33
-65%$41.33
$14.47Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
This cropped pullover from FROM FUTURE cuts a deliberate, modern silhouette—its abbreviated hemline is the first signal that this is knitwear built for movement, not stillness. The cosmic-pink ground is bisected by multicolored bands that race across the sleeves, a graphic interruption that feels less like decoration and more like a pulse. It is a sweater that announces its intentions immediately: this is not about retreating into softness, but about wearing softness as a form of forward momentum. The hand is the second revelation. Four-thread 100% cashmere—a weight that lands with substance rather than flimsiness, yet yields to the touch with the dense, almost buttery compression that only a generous ply count can deliver. There is no scratch, no airy gap in the knit; the fabric holds its shape with a quiet authority, the ribbed edges at the neck, cuffs, and hem cinching just enough to frame the body without gripping it. This is cashmere that feels like armor in cashmere’s clothing: protective, warm, and improbably light for its solidity. Fit is the third act. Regular through the shoulders and chest, the pullover then breaks cleanly at the natural waist, leaving a deliberate pause between hem and hip. That crop is not a trend gesture—it is a proportional tool. It lengthens the line of the torso when worn high, or layers cleanly over a tucked tee without adding bulk. The round neck sits high enough to stand alone, low enough to reveal a collarbone or the edge of a fine chain. Long sleeves end at the wrist bone, ribbed to stay put, not to bunch. In motion, the sweater moves with the body rather than against it. The stripes—a constellation of color that shifts with each arm lift—become kinetic, catching light and attention without shouting. This is a piece that works from desk to dinner to departure gate, equally at home under a wool coat on a cold morning or over a bare back on an unseasonably warm evening. Its season is the long one: autumn through early spring, with a stopover in air-conditioned summer. Style it with a simple white t-shirt peeking from beneath the crop, wide-legged trousers in cream or charcoal, and a clean sneaker. Let the sweater do the talking—the rest of the wardrobe should listen.






















