Ashford Moss No.1 - Silk and Linen Pocket Square
The deepest of our 3 shades in the Ashford Moss story. Double-faced moss green Pocket Square, Silk and Linen, 23cm x 25cm, Woven and Handmade in Ireland. Available with either 4 stamp cut edges (or 3 stamp cut and 1 fringed edge).
Inspiration
The ancient island village of Cong straddles two counties on Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, between the loughs of Corrib and Mask. A sacred battleground in Celtic folklore, a 7th Century Abbey where Ireland’s last high king died, and later the backdrop to John Wayne’s ‘The Quiet Man’, this is a place where time doesn’t dare move.
At the centre of this village, accessible only through a series of turreted drawbridges guarded by footmen, Falcons & Great Irish Wolfhounds, is Ireland’s Neuschwanstein, Ashford Castle.
Inside its walled grounds every tree carries this unique iridescent moss, the texture of a dragon’s skin.
The deepest of our 3 shades in the Ashford Moss story. Double-faced moss green Pocket Square, Silk and Linen, 23cm x 25cm, Woven and Handmade in Ireland. Available with either 4 stamp cut edges (or 3 stamp cut and 1 fringed edge).
Inspiration
The ancient island village of Cong straddles two counties on Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, between the loughs of Corrib and Mask. A sacred battleground in Celtic folklore, a 7th Century Abbey where Ireland’s last high king died, and later the backdrop to John Wayne’s ‘The Quiet Man’, this is a place where time doesn’t dare move.
At the centre of this village, accessible only through a series of turreted drawbridges guarded by footmen, Falcons & Great Irish Wolfhounds, is Ireland’s Neuschwanstein, Ashford Castle.
Inside its walled grounds every tree carries this unique iridescent moss, the texture of a dragon’s skin.
The deepest of our 3 shades in the Ashford Moss story. Double-faced moss green Pocket Square, Silk and Linen, 23cm x 25cm, Woven and Handmade in Ireland. Available with either 4 stamp cut edges (or 3 stamp cut and 1 fringed edge).
Inspiration
The ancient island village of Cong straddles two counties on Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, between the loughs of Corrib and Mask. A sacred battleground in Celtic folklore, a 7th Century Abbey where Ireland’s last high king died, and later the backdrop to John Wayne’s ‘The Quiet Man’, this is a place where time doesn’t dare move.
At the centre of this village, accessible only through a series of turreted drawbridges guarded by footmen, Falcons & Great Irish Wolfhounds, is Ireland’s Neuschwanstein, Ashford Castle.
Inside its walled grounds every tree carries this unique iridescent moss, the texture of a dragon’s skin.