Building a Cashmere Wardrobe
Building a cashmere
wardrobe.
Not a list of everything you could buy. A framework for what to prioritize, in what order, for men and women — so that every cashmere piece you own earns its place and nothing is redundant or underused.
Five pieces, not fifty.
The Quinn approach to a cashmere wardrobe is built on the same principle as everything else: buy less, buy better. A wardrobe of five well-chosen cashmere pieces — pieces that work across seasons, across occasions, and across years — is more valuable than a drawer full of trend-driven purchases that felt exciting in the store and disappointing two months later.
The sequencing matters as much as the selection. Start with the pieces that get the most wear — the ones you'd reach for three days a week if they existed. Then add depth: the occasion piece, the layer, the accessory that completes the look you already have. Never start with the piece that's hardest to wear.

The five pieces,
in order.
The crewneck or turtleneck
The most-worn piece in any cashmere wardrobe. A classic silhouette in a neutral — camel, cream, grey, or navy — that goes with everything you already own. Start here. Buy the best version you can afford; this is the piece you'll wear 40+ times a year for the next decade.
The scarf
The highest cost-per-wear item in the entire Quinn range. A good cashmere scarf worn daily from October through March is worn 150+ times a year. At $150–$200, the math is extraordinary. Add this before you add a second sweater.
The cardigan
The layer that unlocks the rest of your wardrobe. A cashmere cardigan over a silk blouse, over a turtleneck, over a t-shirt — it works with everything and transitions from office to evening without changing. Choose a classic length in a neutral that coordinates with piece 01.
The color piece
Now that you have your neutrals established, one piece in a color you love — a deep burgundy, a warm terracotta, a pale blush. This is the piece that gets noticed. Buy a silhouette you already know works on you (the same silhouette as piece 01 is fine) in a color that excites you.
The occasion piece
Something with more character — a textured stitch, a statement silhouette, a cashmere-silk blend dress. The piece you wear less frequently but that elevates an outfit when it appears. Don't start here; earn it by having a strong foundation first.

The five pieces,
in order.
The crewneck
Start with a classic two-ply crewneck in camel, grey, or navy. These three colors work with virtually any trouser, denim, or suit trouser combination. The crewneck is the most versatile silhouette in men's knitwear — it works under blazers, alone over a shirt collar, and with casual wear. This is the piece you'll wear most.
The scarf
Same logic as women's — the scarf has the highest cost-per-wear of anything in the range. A generous-width cashmere scarf in a solid or subtle pattern worn from October to March returns exceptional value on the investment. Buy this before you buy a second sweater.
The v-neck or turtleneck
The v-neck is the office alternative to the crewneck — it works under a jacket collar without bunching, and the exposed shirt collar gives a more deliberate dressed-up appearance. A turtleneck in charcoal or cream is a strong alternative if your style runs more minimal — it replaces the need for a shirt layer entirely in cold weather.
The heavier knit
A cable knit or shaker stitch piece for weekends, travel, and casual wear. Heavier than the crewneck, more textured, appropriate in contexts where a plain sweater looks too dressed-up or too thin. This is also the category where color experimentation pays off — a rust cable knit reads differently from a grey crewneck and earns its place as a distinct piece.
The accessories round-out
Gloves and a hat complete the cold-weather picture. Cashmere gloves are not a luxury — they're practical warmth in a form that doesn't require the bulk of a heavy-duty winter glove. A good cashmere hat stays on the head, stays warm, and doesn't pill out after one season the way cheaper options do.
Buying cashmere
for someone else.
Cashmere is one of the best gifts in any category — it communicates care, lasts years, and is something many people wouldn't buy themselves. The sizing question is the main obstacle. Here's how to navigate it.
Scarves, gloves, and hats are the gift you can't get wrong — they fit everyone and convey the same luxury as a sweater without the sizing anxiety. A cashmere scarf from Quinn is a genuinely excellent gift that will be used daily for years.
Choose relaxed over fitted. A sweater that's slightly generous is worn; one that's too small is returned or given away. When in doubt about women's sizing, go up one. For men, if you know they wear L in most things, L in Quinn typically fits. Include the gift receipt.
Not a cop-out — a Quinn gift card lets the recipient choose their size, color, and style with full knowledge of the range. For relationships where you're uncertain about preferences, this is the respectful choice. Pair it with a scarf or small accessory so there's something tactile to unwrap.