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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 01:22 AM
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Hi laurenzo -

This site gives a decent explanation of the origin of Pashmina, a term that has become somewhat generic.

http://ask.yahoo.com/19991213.html

I've gathered quite a few "pashminas" over the years from the Middle East, Singapore and Malaysia (although I've certainly never needed one there!) and I even found a nice one at Sam's Club a few years back. They're available just about everywhere in a huge range of colors and quality.

I always feel like a Peruvian woman when I wear mine, but they're wonderful for travel and I always have one near at hand.
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 07:04 AM
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A while back Nieman Marcus had some truly beautiful pahsminas for sale. My mother and I went to try them on and they felt like they were made of spun sugar. Luckily, the colors were just not quite right because the price tag made me think that perhaps I was actually feeling spun gold.
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 07:17 AM
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I bought a lovely pashmina in Salzburg last year. We were there in May but I was chilly and was looking for a scarf. The closest thing I could find was a pashmina. I purchased one is a beautiful teal color, and the woman at the store was kind enough to show me how to "properly" wear it around my neck so it looked fashionable. I now use it all the time. I bring it with me on flights and often use it as an extra blanket if I get cold. Its also a great souvenir because its nice to think about Salzburg every time I pull it out.

Tracy
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 08:16 AM
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http://www.boutiquejewels.com/merchantpolicy.html

Try this link--it has good info and prices. Just bought one in Mocha and am plesed with it. It's very light and will come in handy on planes and chilly evenings.
 
Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 08:46 AM
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I came late (as usual) to the pashmina bandwagon and bought my first this year in Vienna. I do like it a lot. I will probably get another one...or two...
a nice slection here (I like the watered pashmina and also the beaded) along with some background info:
http://www.mypashmina.co.uk/new/mypa...t_pashmina.htm
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 09:52 AM
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"sometimes it is a table runner"

missypie, this is so clever! i going to go home and do this now. love it!

tamara
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 10:02 AM
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With my mother and sister, we have 10 to 15 pashmina's in lots of different colors and qualities (and price ranges). I just love them! Especially the bright coloured ones, they can really spice up an outfit! The ones that don't have the wool/silk are not so warm though!

I usually wear them the fashionable way (folded double around the neck), but when it gets really chilly I don't care that I like a fool when I wrap them all around me. I have a very nice black one which I wear as a shawl with evening wear as well.
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 10:06 AM
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Please buy a fake one. Yhe real ones are, if not worn by the devil, the work of the devil.
(see National Geographics passim)
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 10:59 AM
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I have quite a few that I've picked up in Italy and France, but my fav is a cream colored one I bought in Rome a few years ago. I think I paid 15 euro for it, but it's so soft and wonderful to wrap around my neck or shoulders on a cold day. Can you wash these things, or should they be dry cleaned? - no washing instructions on it. I'm afraid if I dry clean it, it will never feel or smell the same way again, but I don't want to wash it and ruin it either. Hand wash in cold water?
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 01:11 PM
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Wow, thanks for all the replies! I guess I am not a fashion plate since I completely missed the fad! I will check at Ross, TJ Maxx, and the web links given. It looks like it would be nice for the plane ride without packing a bulky blanket. I am not a shawl person because I am short (I'm thinking the "blankie" reference) but used as a coevering, would be ok. I know if I go full cshmere I will arrive in Paris with a red nose from itching the whole time, so I will have to find a blend of something or another.
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 05:12 PM
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never leave home without one!! besides the "blankie" effect, they are perfect for:

covering shoulders when touring Italian churches

covering heads when touring mosques (not an absolute requirement, but still an appropriate sign of respect.)
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Old Jun 22nd, 2006, 07:20 PM
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Just for the heck of it, I searched ebay for "wool and silk pashmina" and found 118 offerings in Ebay stores, some at really good prices.

We were all freezing this past March in Venice, and my friend pulled a large black lightweight wrap from her bag, which warmed her considerably. I believe it was wool or cashmere and silk, and I thougt it was perfect. I want a black one.
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 03:05 AM
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I wear them all the time. I bought some chepaer ones in India and a nice silk one in pink to match a dress for an occasion. None are "real" cashmere but I did see many of various grades. Handmaiden (Thin's secretary!) you paid too much by Indian standards. The cheaper scratchier ones were from 70-150 or slightly more. Some were embroidered which yes brings uop the price but I think you paid way over the mark for it. Did you but in a shop?? or govt emporium? The best ones I have at the best price for quality were from Connaught place where at a shop I was taken upstairs and shown pashminas in silk, cotton, synthetic I think and cashmere (Embroidered and made in Kashmir). I have about 10 or so in different colours and they make a difference to any outfit or the cold to warm up a chilly night.
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 03:28 AM
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Pashmina is like Kashmir from goats that is produced in K=rhe Kasmir region of India. However the very expensive Pashmina's such as those worn by actors and the one's that some of the peopl on this site have purchasde fro thousand's of dollars are actaully from the Tibetan Antelope.

Do not buy them the antelope is endangered because of this trade. The hair is not cut from them but f animals are actually killed to make each piece of clothing. It is a despicable act to do this for nothing more than a fashion item.

Before buying ask if it is from the Tibetan Antelope and do not buy. Many times they give a story of how it is pulled from the underhai but it is a lie.

David J
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 04:55 AM
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I am from India, so just wanted to point out to David that the ones that are banned now (made of the Tibetian Antelope fur) are called Toosh and not Pashmina. Original pashminas cost about USD 600 (plain) in India and much more for the embroidered ones. I am amazed by how loosely the pharase 'pashmina' is used now and how fakes are everywhere.
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 06:08 AM
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David, as an animal lover I'm glad you posted that. It makes me happy that my "pashmina" is a fake. I do believe it cost me all of fifteen euros when I bought it in Salzburg last year!

Tracy
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 06:32 AM
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Deepa thank you for this information. I have a small question for you: On trips to India I often admired what were called "ring" shawls with threads so fine that the whole scarf could be drawn through the ring on one's finger. Does this phrase indicate the fineness of the weave or is the term used interchangeably with any fine pashmina or cashmere-silk scarf? Would it be accurate to say that pashmina is a very fine form of cashmere? Thanks so much!
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 06:40 AM
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I'll chime in and say that I agree "pashmina" now generically just refers to a really large cashmere blend scarf that measures around 25" wide and maybe 45" long.

You double it width-wise and it works like a scarf or as a shawl worn right at the edge or below bare shoulders. Coming from California, I had no idea how to make a pashmina "work" and I looked like a homeless person with a blanket wrapped around me. Go to a website and learn several different ways on how to wear a scarf. This might sound hilarious to people in cold weather climates but I really had no idea how to properly wear a scarf until I moved to Chicago. I just literally hung or tied them around my neck at first and they looked messy and often unwrapped while I was walking. I love pashminas and scarves now -- unless you're travelling in winter I would go with a thinner pashmina (2 or 4 ply) which is more versatile and easier to work with. The ones at Nordstroms in Cali are probably not the thicker cashmere you find in colder climates. Definitely check out TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and Ross, see what you can find. And then find a website on scarves to figure out different ways to tie it - you'll look instantly fabulous. Don't spend a fortune -- you'll find tons of these inexpensive scarves in a dizzying array of colors throughout Europe (and NYC Chinatown, etc.)
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 06:46 AM
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ekscrunchy; the type of shawl you mention is called a shatoosh, made out of cashmere of a certain kind of goat, and is I believe illegal now in most countries.
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Old Jun 28th, 2006, 06:56 AM
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Thanks, Tulips..that is what I thought I'd remembered. A number of years ago a New York Socialite, the late Nan Kempner, got into some kind of (minor) trouble about importing a shahtoosh shawl in to the US. I suppose anything can be called a ring shawl, even if it is made of acrylic, as long as you can draw it though a ring.
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