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  2. Pashmina (material) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pashmina_(material)

    A traditional producer of pashmina wool in the Ladakh region of the Himalayas are a people known as the Changpa. These are a nomadic people and inhabit the Changthang plateau of Tibet , which has a minimum altitude of 13,500 feet (4,100 m) above sea level and a winter temperature which can drop to −40 °C (−40 °F) The Changpa rear sheep in ...

  3. Cashmere wool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cashmere_wool

    A boy's frock produced c. 1855 in Kashmir; cashmere wool twill with silk embroidery and silk tassels. Cashmere has been manufactured in Mongolia, Nepal and Kashmir for thousands of years. The fiber is also known as pashm (Persian for wool) or pashmina (Persian/Urdu word derived from Pashm) for its use in the handmade shawls of Kashmir. [11]

  4. Kashmir shawl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kashmir_shawl

    The Kashmir shawl, the predecessor of the contemporary cashmere shawl, is a type of shawl identified by its distinctive Kashmiri weave and for being made of fine shahtoosh or pashmina wool. Contemporary variants include the pashmina and shahtoosh shawls (often mononymously referred to simply as the pashmina and shahtoosh).

  5. Shawl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawl

    The majority of the woollen fabrics of Kashmir, and particularly the best quality shawls, were and are still made of Pashm or Pashmina, which is the wool of Capra hircus, a species of the wild Asian mountain goat. Hence the shawls came to be called Pashmina.

  6. Changthangi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changthangi

    These goats provide the wool for Kashmir's famous pashmina shawls. Shawls made from Pashmina wool are considered very fine, and are exported worldwide. The Changthangi goats have revitalised the poor economy of Changthang, Ladakh where the wool production generates more than $8 million a year. [8]: 83

  7. Oriental rug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_rug

    Some of the best wool is thought to be from Kurdistan and Tibet where they use kurk, winter wool from the neck and under arms of lambs, and pashmina, wool from the pashmina goat, respectively. [43] Usually, sheep are shorn in spring and fall. The spring shear produces wool of finer quality.