

FROM FUTURE | Oversized Cashmere Turtleneck with Heart Embroidery Gris-Chine-Clair
This is not a sweater that whispers; it announces its presence through the quiet authority of exaggerated proportion. FROM FUTURE’s oversized cashmere turtleneck is a study in deliberate volume, where the silhouette becomes the statement. The defining feature—a single red heart embroidered with “FUTURE” on the chest—punctures the monochrome expanse like a secret signal, a small rebellion against the understated. It is a gesture of optimism stitched into the fabric, a reminder that even the most refined minimalism can carry an emotional charge. The handfeel is the first revelation. This is 2-ply cashmere, lightweight yet dense, with a surface that is impossibly soft without being fragile. The knit has a subtle, almost invisible texture—a fine gauge that allows the yarn to drape rather than bulk. When you touch it, there is a coolness that quickly yields to warmth, a characteristic of quality cashmere that signals its natural origin. The fibers are short and airy, giving the garment a breathable quality that makes it suitable for the transitional chill of early winter or a climate-controlled interior. It is the kind of fabric that begs to be worn against bare skin, not layered over a stiff collar. Cut and construction are where the intelligence of this piece resides. The oversized fit is engineered, not accidental: shoulders drop generously, sleeves pool in soft folds at the wrist, and the body falls in a clean, vertical line that skims the hips without clinging. The mock neck stands at a precise height—high enough to cocoon the neck, low enough to avoid choking the line of a jaw. Ribbed edges at the cuffs, hem, and neckline provide structure, anchoring the volume so the sweater retains its shape rather than collapsing into a shapeless sack. The intarsia heart is flush with the surrounding knit, a testament to precise craftsmanship that ensures the embroidery will not pucker or distort with wear. In movement, this sweater behaves like a second skin with room to breathe. It swings gently with a step, the excess fabric creating a soft, sculptural rhythm. It is the kind of piece that works across a wardrobe spectrum: layered over a crisp white shirt with tailored trousers for a studied nonchalance, or worn alone with raw-hem denim and leather boots for a weekend in the 11th. The grey is a chine-clair—a light, dusty shade that reads as silver in certain lights, stone in others—making it a neutral that refuses to fade into the background. For a sharper edge, try it under a long wool coat with the turtleneck peeking out, or cinched with a thin leather belt at the waist to redefine the silhouette entirely. This is knitwear that demands to be lived in, not merely worn.
Original: $31.38
-65%$31.38
$10.98Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
This is not a sweater that whispers; it announces its presence through the quiet authority of exaggerated proportion. FROM FUTURE’s oversized cashmere turtleneck is a study in deliberate volume, where the silhouette becomes the statement. The defining feature—a single red heart embroidered with “FUTURE” on the chest—punctures the monochrome expanse like a secret signal, a small rebellion against the understated. It is a gesture of optimism stitched into the fabric, a reminder that even the most refined minimalism can carry an emotional charge. The handfeel is the first revelation. This is 2-ply cashmere, lightweight yet dense, with a surface that is impossibly soft without being fragile. The knit has a subtle, almost invisible texture—a fine gauge that allows the yarn to drape rather than bulk. When you touch it, there is a coolness that quickly yields to warmth, a characteristic of quality cashmere that signals its natural origin. The fibers are short and airy, giving the garment a breathable quality that makes it suitable for the transitional chill of early winter or a climate-controlled interior. It is the kind of fabric that begs to be worn against bare skin, not layered over a stiff collar. Cut and construction are where the intelligence of this piece resides. The oversized fit is engineered, not accidental: shoulders drop generously, sleeves pool in soft folds at the wrist, and the body falls in a clean, vertical line that skims the hips without clinging. The mock neck stands at a precise height—high enough to cocoon the neck, low enough to avoid choking the line of a jaw. Ribbed edges at the cuffs, hem, and neckline provide structure, anchoring the volume so the sweater retains its shape rather than collapsing into a shapeless sack. The intarsia heart is flush with the surrounding knit, a testament to precise craftsmanship that ensures the embroidery will not pucker or distort with wear. In movement, this sweater behaves like a second skin with room to breathe. It swings gently with a step, the excess fabric creating a soft, sculptural rhythm. It is the kind of piece that works across a wardrobe spectrum: layered over a crisp white shirt with tailored trousers for a studied nonchalance, or worn alone with raw-hem denim and leather boots for a weekend in the 11th. The grey is a chine-clair—a light, dusty shade that reads as silver in certain lights, stone in others—making it a neutral that refuses to fade into the background. For a sharper edge, try it under a long wool coat with the turtleneck peeking out, or cinched with a thin leather belt at the waist to redefine the silhouette entirely. This is knitwear that demands to be lived in, not merely worn.






















