Toorallie Wool Jacket Cardamon

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The Toorallie Wool Jacket in Cardamon has a boxy silhouette featuring a button down front, split side seam detail, exposed front pockets, and collar. The slightly wider sleeves are designed to fit easily over winter layers. It is made of 100% double-faced Wool and is unlined.

 

$395.00

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Toorallie Wool Jacket Cardamon

The Toorallie Wool Jacket in Cardamon has a boxy silhouette featuring a button down front, split side seam detail, exposed front pockets, and collar. The slightly wider sleeves are designed to fit easily over winter layers. It is made of double-faced Wool and is unlined.

SIZE GUIDANCE

True to size.Our model is wearing a size 8.
Garment Length for size 8 is 57cm. Add 1cm for each size.

MATERIALS

Cardamon: 100% Double Faced Wool, 850GSM. This garment is unlined.

MANUFACTURING

We engage specialist independent and reliable factories who share our uncompromising standards of quality and reflect our values.

Our outerwear is made at a specialist hand-sewing coat factory in Guangdong Province, southern China. Each year, our Director of Production visits our partners in China to quality control and ensure their practices meet our exacting ethical standards.

GARMENT CARE

Dry clean only.

When caring for this garment, always refer to the label first.

Merino wool is antibacterial and odour-resistant, so it doesn’t require washing after every wear. We recommend hanging your garments to air between wears instead.

 

SIZE CHART in cm

Our model is wearing a size 8. Garment Length for size 8 is 57 cm. Add 1cm for each size.Our model is wearing a size 8. Garment Length for size 8 is 57 cm. Add 1cm for each size.

SIZE XS / 6 S / 8 M / 10 L / 12 XL / 14 XXL / 16 XXXL / 18
BUST 81 86 91 96 101 106 111
WAIST 63.5 68.5 73.5 78.5 83.5 88.5 93.5
HIP 90 95 100 105 110 115 120

 

Size

8, 10, 12, 14

Availability Now available in-store at
209 Clovelly Road Randwick 2031

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Brand

Toorallie

We are Australian Merino Wool experts.
We draw on our legacy of specialist knitwear knowledge to bring the age-old Merino Wool fibre into the future. Our mission is to honour the circular nature of merino wool in considered garments with present-day practicality. Grounded by the ancestral legacy of ambition and enquiry into Australian merino wool, co-Directors and twins Simon and Steve Smith honour their heritage with a reverence for tradition and an appreciation of modern quality.
Merino Wool is a regenerative, natural fibre which underpins Toorallie’s commitment to quality. Our approach to sustainability is frank: the fashion industry will never be truly circular. In response to this we create garments of technical conviction and classic design: they are made to stand the test of time.
We design with intention, honouring the inimitable benefits of the merino wool fibre from the outset through to the finished garment.
Australian merino wool is a natural fibre derived from the merino sheep. The wool is spun into yarn and contains self-cleaning and moisture-wicking properties, making it naturally resistant to odour and stains. The fibre also maintains its shape after wearing and washing, lending it long-lasting wearability.
The process begins by selecting every fleece from Responsible Wool Standard (RWS) accredited farms. RWS is an industry tool to ensure progressive land management and uphold animal welfare standards. Generations of expertise are employed when selecting wool, evaluating micron, staple length, crimp, and lustre unique to each fleece. The qualities are reflected in the finished garment and can be separated into two distinct categories of knitwear: worsted and woollen.
Since 1991
Tracing a 200-year family-owned history through the generations of the Smith and Garnock family, Toorallie began as a visionary merino sheep stud in 1825. Today, the legacy is preserved by its founder’s descendants, twin brothers Simon & Steve Smith.
Growing up on the Toorallie farm in Bombala, NSW – Simon and Steve's resilience was characteristic of their parents’ tireless efforts to produce, spin, and knit their own wool. The Smith family worked exhaustively across their three Toorallie sheep stations where they initially produced quality wool, before evolving into a knitwear mill and fashion brand in 1991.
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