


INOUI | Screen-Printed Cotton Fouta Scarf - Multi
A scarf that reads more like a canvas than an accessory, the INOUI Fo21des14 Multi makes its entrance with the confident geometry of a screen-printed fouta. Its defining feature is a bold, abstract motif—drawn from the house’s most striking archival designs—that sprawls across the fabric in layered, graphic strokes. The palette is a study in controlled dissonance: earthy ochres and deep indigos collide with flashes of rust and ivory, creating a visual rhythm that feels both tribal and thoroughly contemporary. This is not a quiet piece; it commands the silhouette with a painterly authority that refuses to be relegated to a mere afterthought. The hand of the fabric is where the scarf’s dual nature reveals itself. Woven from 100% cotton, it possesses the crisp, breathable structure of a traditional fouta—that North African weaving heritage that prizes utility as much as beauty. The cotton is milled to a medium weight, offering a satisfying heft without stiffness; it drapes with a clean, almost architectural fall, yet softens with wear to a gentle, lived-in suppleness. The screen-printing process lends the surface a slight, tactile grain, as if the pigment has been pressed directly into the weave, making each fold a study in texture and light absorption. Proportioned at 104 by 185 centimeters, the scarf offers a generous expanse that invites manipulation. The cut is a simple, unadorned rectangle—a masterclass in restraint that allows the print to do the heavy lifting. The edges are finished with a narrow, hand-rolled hem, a detail that speaks to the artisanal provenance of its Indian manufacture. This is not a mass-produced square; the length is deliberate, allowing for a deep wrap, a cascading drape, or a tightly knotted neckline. The fit is what you make of it—a fluid, adaptable geometry that rewards experimentation. Movement is the scarf’s hidden language. When thrown over the shoulders, it falls in clean, vertical lines, the cotton’s slight stiffness holding the shape until a breeze animates the hem into a soft flutter. Wrapped around the neck, it gathers into heavy, voluminous folds that break the print into unexpected fragments. It moves with the wearer, not against them, the fabric’s breathable nature ensuring it never clings or suffocates. This is a piece for transitional seasons—the cool edge of a late spring evening, the first chill of autumn, or the air-conditioned interior of a summer gallery. Its versatility is its true currency. Drape it over a simple white linen dress for a stark contrast of texture and pattern, or knot it at the hip of high-waisted trousers to break a monochrome suit. It can serve as a pareo on a coastal holiday, a shawl in a drafty bistro, or a wall hanging in a studio apartment. Style it with a cream cashmere crewneck and raw denim for a studied nonchalance, or let it be the sole ornament against a black turtleneck and tailored wool coat. The INOUI scarf does not complete an outfit—it redefines it.
Original: $14.80
-65%$14.80
$5.18Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A scarf that reads more like a canvas than an accessory, the INOUI Fo21des14 Multi makes its entrance with the confident geometry of a screen-printed fouta. Its defining feature is a bold, abstract motif—drawn from the house’s most striking archival designs—that sprawls across the fabric in layered, graphic strokes. The palette is a study in controlled dissonance: earthy ochres and deep indigos collide with flashes of rust and ivory, creating a visual rhythm that feels both tribal and thoroughly contemporary. This is not a quiet piece; it commands the silhouette with a painterly authority that refuses to be relegated to a mere afterthought. The hand of the fabric is where the scarf’s dual nature reveals itself. Woven from 100% cotton, it possesses the crisp, breathable structure of a traditional fouta—that North African weaving heritage that prizes utility as much as beauty. The cotton is milled to a medium weight, offering a satisfying heft without stiffness; it drapes with a clean, almost architectural fall, yet softens with wear to a gentle, lived-in suppleness. The screen-printing process lends the surface a slight, tactile grain, as if the pigment has been pressed directly into the weave, making each fold a study in texture and light absorption. Proportioned at 104 by 185 centimeters, the scarf offers a generous expanse that invites manipulation. The cut is a simple, unadorned rectangle—a masterclass in restraint that allows the print to do the heavy lifting. The edges are finished with a narrow, hand-rolled hem, a detail that speaks to the artisanal provenance of its Indian manufacture. This is not a mass-produced square; the length is deliberate, allowing for a deep wrap, a cascading drape, or a tightly knotted neckline. The fit is what you make of it—a fluid, adaptable geometry that rewards experimentation. Movement is the scarf’s hidden language. When thrown over the shoulders, it falls in clean, vertical lines, the cotton’s slight stiffness holding the shape until a breeze animates the hem into a soft flutter. Wrapped around the neck, it gathers into heavy, voluminous folds that break the print into unexpected fragments. It moves with the wearer, not against them, the fabric’s breathable nature ensuring it never clings or suffocates. This is a piece for transitional seasons—the cool edge of a late spring evening, the first chill of autumn, or the air-conditioned interior of a summer gallery. Its versatility is its true currency. Drape it over a simple white linen dress for a stark contrast of texture and pattern, or knot it at the hip of high-waisted trousers to break a monochrome suit. It can serve as a pareo on a coastal holiday, a shawl in a drafty bistro, or a wall hanging in a studio apartment. Style it with a cream cashmere crewneck and raw denim for a studied nonchalance, or let it be the sole ornament against a black turtleneck and tailored wool coat. The INOUI scarf does not complete an outfit—it redefines it.














