Solid wool weave with a light heather-gray colorway that reads almost neutral — pairs with white sheets, dark wood beds, or sectional throws without fighting whatever else is in the room. The pure-wool construction breathes (so it doesn’t trap heat the way synthetic blankets do) and the heavy gauge means it drapes with weight instead of floating off the bed.
King-size sleepers reach for this when they want a real wool top blanket on the bed, not a polyester throw. It also works as a cabin or guest-room blanket, a couch throw on cold-weather Sundays, or the heavyweight layer for camping cots when you’re done with sleeping bags.
Faribault Mill has been weaving wool blankets in Faribault, Minnesota since 1865. Same building. Same looms. Three generations of weavers still on the floor.

