Giulio Sapio builds this shawl from a single piece of premium Italian lamb leather - Agnello, in the Italian spec - worked into a hybrid surface where densely packed boucle-like curls interrupt longer shaggy tufts. The pile reads obsidian under any light, absorbing rather than reflecting. Up close, the texture is restless and multi-directional; from a distance, the surface reads as pure matte black mass. Turn the shawl to its reverse and the construction reveals itself: smooth matte lamb hide on one face, pelt on the other, a single-layer garment carrying both textures without lining or backing.
The silhouette is a cocoon. A structured funnel neck rises close to the jaw, broad through the shoulders, cropped at mid-chest in a hem that breaks irregularly along the natural edge of the pelt. This is what Sapio means when he talks about the garment as an extension of the body rather than a layer over it - an architectural volume that the wearer steps into, that stays where the pelt's own weight places it. No bracing, no boning, no armature. The material holds the form.








