

INOUI | Chat Embroidered Pouch Light-Blue
A light-blue confection of embroidered cotton and silk, the INOUI Pouch Pm23pbc27 arrives as a study in controlled whimsy. Its silhouette is a soft, rounded crescent—neither rigid nor floppy—that sits neatly in the palm or hangs with a gentle sway from the wrist. The defining feature is the "Chat" embroidery: a delicate, hand-done feline motif that plays across the surface with the quiet irreverence of a sketch. This is not a loud statement, but a private smile, a detail that rewards a second glance. The fabric itself is a tactile paradox: a blend of 72% cotton and 28% silk that yields a matte, almost papery hand, yet carries a subtle, dry sheen where the light catches the embroidery threads. The cotton gives it a sturdy, everyday resilience; the silk lends a whisper of luxury that prevents it from feeling casual. When held, the pouch has a satisfying weight—substantial enough to feel considered, light enough to forget you are carrying it. The construction is artisanal, with neat, invisible seams that preserve the purity of the shape, and a zipper closure that glides with precision, secured by a small leather pull. In movement, the pouch becomes a quiet companion. It tucks under the arm against a wool coat, or swings from the hand alongside a linen dress. Its proportions are deliberately modest—small enough to hold essentials (a phone, a cardholder, a lipstick) without distorting the line of a jacket or a trouser pocket. The light-blue color is a chameleon: it reads as a soft neutral against black or navy, and as a fresh accent against cream, beige, or white. For spring and summer, it floats over light cottons and silks; for autumn and winter, it cuts through heavier textures like tweed or cashmere with a crisp, almost icy clarity. Style it as a counterpoint: let it hang from the wrist of a tailored blazer for a lunch meeting, or slip it inside a larger tote for a day of errands, pulling it out when you need only the bare minimum. It is a piece that understands proportion and restraint—a small, deliberate object that does more by doing less.
Original: $9.82
-65%$9.82
$3.44Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A light-blue confection of embroidered cotton and silk, the INOUI Pouch Pm23pbc27 arrives as a study in controlled whimsy. Its silhouette is a soft, rounded crescent—neither rigid nor floppy—that sits neatly in the palm or hangs with a gentle sway from the wrist. The defining feature is the "Chat" embroidery: a delicate, hand-done feline motif that plays across the surface with the quiet irreverence of a sketch. This is not a loud statement, but a private smile, a detail that rewards a second glance. The fabric itself is a tactile paradox: a blend of 72% cotton and 28% silk that yields a matte, almost papery hand, yet carries a subtle, dry sheen where the light catches the embroidery threads. The cotton gives it a sturdy, everyday resilience; the silk lends a whisper of luxury that prevents it from feeling casual. When held, the pouch has a satisfying weight—substantial enough to feel considered, light enough to forget you are carrying it. The construction is artisanal, with neat, invisible seams that preserve the purity of the shape, and a zipper closure that glides with precision, secured by a small leather pull. In movement, the pouch becomes a quiet companion. It tucks under the arm against a wool coat, or swings from the hand alongside a linen dress. Its proportions are deliberately modest—small enough to hold essentials (a phone, a cardholder, a lipstick) without distorting the line of a jacket or a trouser pocket. The light-blue color is a chameleon: it reads as a soft neutral against black or navy, and as a fresh accent against cream, beige, or white. For spring and summer, it floats over light cottons and silks; for autumn and winter, it cuts through heavier textures like tweed or cashmere with a crisp, almost icy clarity. Style it as a counterpoint: let it hang from the wrist of a tailored blazer for a lunch meeting, or slip it inside a larger tote for a day of errands, pulling it out when you need only the bare minimum. It is a piece that understands proportion and restraint—a small, deliberate object that does more by doing less.




















