The cardigan is, in theory, the most versatile garment in existence. A layer you can add or remove, something that works over almost anything, practical in every season. In practice, for anyone with an alternative wardrobe, the cardigan is a problem. Because most cardigans are designed for a wardrobe that isn’t yours. They’re designed for neutrals and florals and the kind of outfits that appear in lifestyle magazines. Put one over a band tee and a pair of black jeans and it looks like you’ve borrowed it from someone else’s life.
I’ve been trying to solve this problem for years. I’ve bought cardigans that were almost right — plain black ones that were fine but felt like a concession, patterned ones that were too much, oversized ones that swamped everything underneath. None of them felt like they belonged to the same wardrobe as the rest of what I own. They were functional. They were not mine.
Finding the Banned Apparel Cardigan
I found the Banned Apparel Black Bat Embroidery V-Neck Knitted Cardigan on ALTOE while browsing the clothing section on a grey Saturday morning. The bat embroidery across the chest stopped me immediately — not because it was dramatic, but because it was exactly the right scale. Large enough to be the point of the garment, small enough that it doesn’t overwhelm whatever you’re wearing underneath. The V-neck silhouette is classic and flattering. The knit looked substantial in the photographs.
Banned Apparel I already trusted from the Lyra jumper I’d bought previously — their knitwear is well-made and holds up to regular wear, which is the only standard that matters for something you’re going to reach for constantly. I ordered it the same morning.
First Impressions
It arrived quickly and the quality was immediately apparent. The knit is dense and even — no thin patches, no loose stitches, nothing that suggests it was made in a hurry. The bat embroidery is raised and textured, worked into the fabric with the kind of precision that tells you it was done properly rather than quickly. The V-neck sits cleanly without gaping or pulling. The fit is true to size with a slight ease that makes it comfortable to layer without adding bulk.
I tried it on over a black slip dress and looked in the mirror. It looked like it belonged there. Not like a cardigan I’d added because I was cold, but like a deliberate part of the outfit. That’s the thing I’d been trying to achieve for years and hadn’t managed with anything else.
How I Wear It
The honest answer is: constantly. Over dresses, over band tees, over blouses. Buttoned up as a top in its own right on days when I want something simple. Open as a layer over something more structured. It works in all of these configurations because the bat embroidery gives it enough identity that it reads as intentional regardless of what’s underneath, and the black base means it doesn’t clash with anything in my wardrobe.
I’ve worn it to work, to evenings out, to weekends at home when I want to be comfortable but not entirely without aesthetic consideration. It handles all of these contexts without requiring me to think about whether it’s appropriate. It just works. That’s rarer than it should be.
After Several Months
The cardigan has been through the washing machine more times than I can count on a gentle cycle and it has held its shape, its softness, and its embroidery without any degradation. The knit hasn’t pilled. The V-neck hasn’t stretched. The bats are as crisp as they were when it arrived. This is a garment that was made to last, which is the only kind worth buying.
I’ve recommended it to three friends since buying it. Two of them have ordered it. The third is still thinking about it, which I find baffling, but I’m patient.
Where to Find It
The Banned Apparel Black Bat Embroidery V-Neck Knitted Cardigan is available now at ALTOE. You’ll find it in the Apparel & Accessories, Clothing, and Clothing Tops collections, and also in the Latest Products drop if you want to see what else has just arrived.
If you’ve been reaching for a cardigan that doesn’t quite feel like yours, this one might be the one that does.
— Morrigan Hale
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