A guide to the feel, texture and nature of alpaca and llama wool.
Natural wool has a different kind of comfort.
It is warm, breathable, textural and grounding. It holds heat beautifully, layers easily, and brings a sense of softness and substance that synthetic blankets often do not. It is the kind of material that feels connected to place; to cold mornings, slow evenings, open air and the quiet ritual of wrapping something warm around your shoulders.
But wool is also a natural fibre.
That means it does not behave like cotton, fleece, faux fur or synthetic plush. It has texture. It has character. It can feel brushed, airy, dry, smooth, weighty, lofty or slightly fibrous depending on the fibre, weave and finish.
Before choosing your blanket, we want you to understand what alpaca and llama wool feel like so you can decide whether natural wool is right for you.
WHAT DOES ALPACA WOOL FEEL LIKE?
Alpaca wool is known for being soft, warm and lightweight.
Compared with traditional sheep’s wool, alpaca often feels smoother, silkier and less scratchy. Many people find it beautifully soft against the skin, especially baby alpaca or when finished with a brushed surface.
Alpaca fibre can also have a gentle natural sheen. This gives many alpaca blankets a soft lustre in the light, especially when the fibres are brushed. It is not shiny like synthetic fabric, but it can catch the light in a quiet, natural way.
Depending on the blanket, alpaca wool may feel:
Soft and warmLightweight but insulatingSmooth with a subtle brushed textureAiry rather than heavyNaturally texturalSlightly fibrous, because it is a natural animal fibre
If you love natural textures, wool layers, linen, canvas, timber, leather and materials that feel honest and tactile, alpaca wool will likely feel beautiful to you.
If you are extremely sensitive to animal fibres or prefer completely smooth, slippery or plush synthetic textures, it may feel more textural than you expect.
WHAT DOES LLAMA WOOL FEEL LIKE?
Llama wool is warm, durable and beautifully grounding.
It generally has a slightly stronger, more substantial feel than alpaca. It can feel weightier, more textured and more rustic-refined, while still offering warmth and comfort.
Llama wool blankets often have a beautiful woven character. They feel less like a delicate decorative throw and more like a practical, lasting textile made for real use.
Depending on the blanket, llama wool may feel:
Warm and insulatingWeightier than alpacaTextural and substantialDurable and hardwearingNaturally fibrousComforting rather than silky
Llama wool is a good choice if you like a blanket with presence, something that feels sturdy, warm and grounding. It is especially well suited to beds, cabins, vans, camp setups and cool evenings by the fire.
If you want the softest possible feel against bare skin, you may prefer one of our alpaca or baby alpaca blend pieces.
WHY DOES WOOL FEEL DIFFERENT FROM SYNTHETIC BLANKETS?
Synthetic blankets are often made to feel instantly soft, fluffy or smooth. They can be very plush, but they do not always breathe well, regulate temperature naturally or age in the same way as natural fibres.
Wool feels different because it is grown, not manufactured.
Each fibre has its own structure. This is what gives wool its warmth, breathability, moisture management and natural texture. It is also why wool can feel more alive and tactile than synthetic fabric.
Natural wool may not always feel perfectly uniform. Some pieces may have subtle variation in texture, shade, weave or finish. This is part of the character of slow-made textiles.
For us, this is part of the beauty.
WARMTH WITHOUT THE BULK
One of the reasons alpaca and llama wool are so well suited to open-air living is their natural insulation.
The fibres help hold warmth close while still allowing the body to breathe. This makes them useful for cool nights, winter camping, vanlife, cabins and early mornings when the temperature drops.
Unlike bulky synthetic bedding, a wool blanket can offer warmth without feeling overly heavy or stiff. It layers beautifully across a bed, over a sleeping setup, around shoulders, or across your lap by the fire.
BREATHABLE & TEMPERATURE REGULATING
Wool is naturally breathable.
It helps manage warmth as conditions shift, which is especially useful outdoors where temperatures can change quickly between day, dusk and overnight.
Alpaca and llama wool can help keep you warm when the air cools, while still allowing excess heat and moisture to move away from the body. This helps make wool comfortable across seasons, not just in deep winter.
NATURALLY ODOUR RESISTANT
One of the most practical things about wool is that it does not need constant washing.
Alpaca and llama wool are naturally odour resistant, which makes them well suited to camping, travel and vanlife, where bedding is not always washed as often as it would be at home.
Often, a good shake and time in fresh air is enough to refresh your blanket between uses.
TEXTURE, VARIATION & NATURAL CHARACTER
Because many of our pieces are slow-made, handwoven or produced in small batches, slight variations may occur.
This can include small differences in:
ColourShadeWeavePattern placementTextureFinishEdge detailWeight or drape
These details are part of the nature of slow-made textiles. They are not considered faults unless the item is significantly different from its description or images.
We do our best to photograph and describe each blanket clearly, but please remember that colour and texture can appear differently depending on screen settings, lighting and the way a piece is styled.
IS WOOL ITCHY?
This depends on the fibre, finish and the person wearing it.
Many people find alpaca wool soft and comfortable, especially compared with traditional sheep’s wool. Baby alpaca blends are often softer again. Llama wool can feel more textured and substantial.
However, everyone experiences natural fibres differently. If you are highly sensitive to wool or animal fibres, you may notice texture more than someone who is used to natural materials.
Our blankets are chosen for comfort, warmth and beauty, but they are not designed to feel like synthetic fleece or faux fur. They are natural wool textiles, and their texture is part of what makes them special.
WHICH BLANKET SHOULD I CHOOSE?
Choose alpaca or baby alpaca blend if you want:A softer feelA lighter layerA gentle brushed textureA blanket to wrap around shouldersSomething more comfortable against the skinAn easy piece for vanlife, camp chairs, sofas and beds
Choose llama wool if you want:A weightier feelA more substantial blanketA durable woven textileA grounding layer for beds and cabinsA blanket with strong texture and presenceA piece that feels practical, warm and lasting
If softness against skin is your top priority, choose alpaca or baby alpaca blend.
If durability, weight and woven character matter most, llama wool may be the better fit.
MADE TO BE LIVED WITH
Natural wool is not about perfection.
It is about warmth, texture, use and longevity. A good wool blanket softens into your life over time. It becomes the piece you reach for at the end of the day, pack for the weekend, fold over the bed, or carry out to the fire.
It may gather memory.It may hold the shape of use.It may become softer with time and care.
That is part of its nature.
SO, IS WOOL RIGHT FOR YOU?
Wool may be right for you if you value:
Natural fibresWarmth without unnecessary bulkBreathabilityTexture and characterSlow-made textilesDurable piecesLess frequent washingComfort that moves between home and elsewhere
Wool may not be right for you if you prefer:
Completely smooth texturesVery plush fleece-like softnessPerfectly uniform factory finishesNo natural fibre texture at allBlankets with no variation in weave, tone or feel
Our hope is that every Elsewhere Abode piece becomes something you truly love, not just something you keep. If you are unsure which blanket is right for you, please reach out before purchasing. We are always happy to help you choose based on softness, weight, texture, colour and intended use.
Winter camping asks more from every piece you pack.
The air is sharper. The ground is colder. The evenings arrive quickly. And once the sun drops, comfort becomes more than a nice idea, it becomes the difference between enduring the night and genuinely enjoying it.
For many campers, the default choice has always been technical gear: sleeping bags, synthetic blankets, fleece layers and bulky camp bedding designed to perform, but rarely designed to feel beautiful.
At Elsewhere Abode, we believe warmth and beauty do not need to sit in separate worlds.
Alpaca and llama wool offer the kind of natural insulation that makes them beautifully suited to winter camping, while bringing a level of softness, texture and visual warmth that traditional camping blankets often miss.
NATURAL INSULATION, WITHOUT THE BULK
Alpaca and llama fibres are naturally insulating. Their fibres help trap warm air close to the body, creating a layer of comfort that feels generous without needing excessive weight or bulk.
This makes them especially useful for winter camping, where warmth matters but space is limited. Whether you are sleeping under canvas, layering bedding in the back of a van, or sitting beside the fire after dark, a natural wool blanket adds warmth in a way that still feels breathable and comfortable.
Unlike some synthetic camp blankets that can feel stiff, slippery or overly technical, alpaca and llama wool have a natural softness and drape. They wrap around the body beautifully, layer easily over bedding, and bring a sense of comfort that feels closer to home.
WARMTH THAT BREATHES
One of the greatest benefits of alpaca and llama wool is that they help regulate temperature.
In winter camping, staying warm is only part of the equation. You also want bedding that can breathe. If a blanket traps too much heat or moisture, it can quickly feel clammy or uncomfortable, particularly when temperatures shift between a warm fire, a cold tent, and early morning condensation.
Natural wool fibres help manage this balance. They hold warmth when the air cools, while allowing excess heat and moisture to move away from the body. This makes alpaca and llama wool ideal for the changing conditions of open-air living.
Warm enough for cold nights. Breathable enough for layered bedding. Comfortable enough to use beyond winter.
A BETTER KIND OF CAMP BLANKET
Traditional camping blankets are often chosen for practicality alone. They might be durable, compact or easy to wash, but they rarely make a space feel considered.
Alpaca and llama wool do something different.
They bring function and feeling together.
Draped across an inflatable mattress in a bell tent, folded at the end of a van bed, wrapped around shoulders beside the fire, or layered over a sleeping bag for extra warmth, these blankets change the mood of a campsite. They soften the edges. They make the setup feel intentional. They turn a cold place into somewhere you want to stay awhile.
This is comfort that performs, but still belongs in view.
SOFT, LIGHT AND COMFORTING
Alpaca wool is known for its exceptional softness and lightness. Llama wool brings warmth, texture and a reassuring natural feel. Together, these fibres offer a beautiful alternative to synthetic bedding and heavy woollen blankets that can feel coarse or cumbersome.
For winter camping, this matters.
You want warmth, but you also want a blanket that feels good against your skin. You want something you can pull around your shoulders in the morning, layer across your lap by the fire, or sleep under without feeling weighed down.
Natural wool has a quiet kind of luxury; not fragile, not precious, but deeply comfortable.
PRACTICAL FOR LIFE OUTSIDE
Alpaca and llama wool are not only beautiful fibres. They are practical ones.
They are naturally odour resistant, which is especially helpful when camping, travelling or using bedding in places where regular washing is not always possible. Often, a good shake and time in fresh air is enough to refresh the fibres between uses.
They also manage moisture well and dry relatively quickly compared with heavier bedding, making them a considered choice for open-air environments where dampness, dew and changing weather are part of the experience.
And because wool fibres are naturally flame resistant, they offer a practical advantage around outdoor living. They are not fireproof and should always be kept a safe distance from flames, sparks and heaters, but they are naturally less prone to ignition than many synthetic textiles.
For winter camping, these quiet functional benefits add up.
WARMTH FOR MORE THAN SLEEPING
A good winter camping blanket should work beyond the bed.
It should be something you reach for as soon as the temperature drops. Something you carry from the tent to the fire. Something that wraps around you while the kettle boils, sits across your lap over morning coffee, or adds another layer when the night turns colder than expected.
Alpaca and llama wool blankets are especially suited to this kind of use because they feel at home in more than one setting.
They are bedding, but they are also a throw. A fireside layer. A vanlife essential. A cabin companion. A piece you can use at home all week, then pack for the weekend without it feeling like camping gear.
That versatility is part of their value.
MADE FOR FEWER, BETTER THINGS
Winter camping often teaches you what matters.
You notice which pieces you actually use. Which ones make the experience easier. Which ones earn their place in the van, the tent or the back of the car.
A natural wool blanket is one of those pieces.
Chosen well and cared for gently, alpaca and llama wool blankets are made to be used season after season. They are not trend-based, throwaway homewares or single-purpose camping accessories. They are lasting comfort pieces that move between home and elsewhere.
Beautiful enough for the bedroom. Durable enough for the campsite. Warm enough for winter nights. Soft enough to become part of your daily rituals.
THE ELSEWHERE ABODE APPROACH TO WINTER CAMPING
We do not believe winter camping should mean sacrificing beauty for function.
The best outdoor pieces should do both. They should keep you warm, hold up to real use, and make the place you are staying feel more like your own.
Alpaca and llama wool allow us to bring natural warmth, texture and practicality into open-air living without the harshness of traditional camping gear.
They are for bell tents lit by lanterns. Vans parked under cold skies. Cabins in the high country. Camp chairs pulled close to the fire. Mornings when the air is still cold, but the coffee is hot and the blanket is exactly where you left it.
Winter camping becomes softer with the right layers.
And sometimes, the right blanket is what turns the whole experience from cold to unforgettable.
HOW TO CARE FOR YOUR ALPACA OR LLAMA WOOL BLANKETAir often. Wash lightly. Store thoughtfully. And let it gather the quiet memory of the places it has been.
A natural wool blanket is made to be used, lived with and carried with you.
With the right care, alpaca and llama wool blankets can remain soft, warm and beautiful season after season. These fibres are naturally hardwearing, breathable and odour resistant, which means they do not need to be washed as often as ordinary bedding. In fact, gentle care and regular airing are often the best way to keep them at their best.
Here is how to care for your Elsewhere Abode blanket, wherever it has been.
WHY NATURAL WOOL NEEDS LESS WASHING
Alpaca and llama wool are naturally suited to open-air living. The fibres help regulate temperature, release moisture and resist odour, making them ideal for camping, vanlife, cabins and everyday open-air use.
Unlike synthetic bedding, which can hold smells and moisture, natural wool often refreshes beautifully with fresh air. This means less washing, less wear on the fibres and a longer life for your blanket.
Our approach is simple: air often, spot clean when needed, and wash only when necessary.
AFTER EACH USE
After a weekend away, shake your blanket outside to remove dust, leaves, grass or sand.
Then hang it somewhere with good airflow, ideally in fresh air and out of harsh direct sun. This helps release moisture, smoke smells and general outdoor air from the fibres.
If your blanket has been used near a campfire, let it air for a full day before folding it away. Wool is naturally odour resistant, but smoke can settle into any textile if stored too soon.
SPOT CLEANING
For small marks or spills, spot cleaning is usually best.
Gently blot the area with a clean, damp cloth. Avoid rubbing, scrubbing or twisting the fibres, as this can disturb the weave and texture.
Use cool water and, if needed, a small amount of wool-safe detergent. Do not use bleach, stain removers, fabric softeners or harsh laundry products.
Once cleaned, blot away excess moisture with a dry towel and allow the area to dry flat in the shade.
WASHING YOUR BLANKET
Wash only when needed.
Natural wool does not need frequent machine washing. Overwashing can shorten the life of the fibres, affect the texture and reduce the softness of the blanket over time.
Use cold water, and hand wash, or use a gentle wool cycle and a mild wool-safe detergent. Wash separately and avoid overloading the machine, as large blankets need space to move gently.
Never use hot water. Heat can cause natural wool fibres to shrink, felt or lose their shape.
DRYING
Do not tumble dry.
After washing, gently press out excess water without wringing or twisting. Lay the blanket flat on a clean towel and reshape it while damp.
Dry flat in the shade, away from direct sunlight and direct heat. Avoid hanging a wet blanket over a line, as the weight of the water can stretch the fibres.
Allow it to dry fully before folding or storing.
STORING YOUR BLANKET
Before storing, make sure your blanket is completely clean and dry.
Fold it gently and keep it in a cool, dry place with good airflow. Avoid plastic storage bags for long periods, as natural fibres prefer to breathe.
For seasonal storage, use a cotton or canvas storage bag. You may also like to add cedar, lavender or another natural moth deterrent nearby, especially if storing for several months.
Keep away from damp areas, direct sunlight and heavy items that may compress the fibres for long periods.
CARING FOR YOUR BLANKET OUTDOORS
Elsewhere Abode blankets are designed to move between home and open-air living, but they still deserve considered care.
Use them on beds, camp chairs, picnic rugs and around the fire but avoid placing them directly on wet ground, sharp rocks or rough surfaces for extended periods.
Keep all blankets a safe distance from open flames, sparks, heaters and cooking areas. Wool is naturally flame resistant, but it is not fireproof.
If your blanket becomes damp while camping, hang it to air as soon as possible. Natural wool manages moisture well, but it should never be packed away wet.
HOW TO KEEP IT SOFT
Natural wool softens with use, but it responds best to gentle handling.
Avoid harsh brushing, high heat, strong chemicals and frequent washing. If fibres lift slightly over time, this is part of the natural character of wool. A light shake and regular airing will help keep the texture fresh.
For brushed alpaca and alpaca blend blankets, some surface fibre movement is normal. This is not a fault, it is part of the soft, tactile nature of the material.
WHEN TO PROFESSIONAL CLEAN
For deep stains, heavy soiling, large blankets or any uncertainty, choose a professional cleaner experienced with wool textiles.
This is especially recommended for oversized llama wool blankets, handwoven pieces or blankets with more delicate brushed finishes.
MADE TO BE KEPT
A natural wool blanket is not a throwaway layer.
It is something to fold across the bed, pack into the van, wrap around shoulders by the fire and bring back out when the air turns cool again.
With gentle care, your blanket will hold its warmth, texture and comfort over time becoming part of your rituals at home and elsewhere.
Air often. Wash lightly. Store thoughtfully. And let it gather the quiet memory of the places it has been.
Long before alpaca and llama wool became known around the world for its softness, warmth and beauty, it was part of everyday life in the Andes.
For thousands of years, communities across the Andean highlands have relied on camelid fibres for warmth, protection and trade. Alpacas and llamas were domesticated in the Andes around 6,000 to 7,000 years ago, shaped by a landscape of altitude, cold nights, strong sun and changing weather. Their fibres evolved for those conditions; naturally warm, breathable, strong and practical.
In high-altitude climates, warmth is not a luxury. It is essential.
Alpaca and llama wool became valued because it could provide insulation without unnecessary bulk. It could be woven into blankets, garments and textiles that protected people from cold mountain air, while still feeling light enough to wear, carry and use daily. These fibres were not simply decorative. they were functional, enduring and deeply connected to place.
Over time, weaving became more than a practical skill. It became a cultural language.
Across Andean communities, patterns, colours and techniques have been passed down through generations. A woven textile can carry memory, identity, landscape and tradition. Every line, motif and fibre speaks to a slower way of making; one shaped by hand, patience and knowledge.
At Elsewhere Abode, our pieces are handcrafted in Ecuador, where textile traditions remain an important part of local culture and livelihood.
By purchasing from us, you are supporting fair trade with local artisans in Otavalo, a region known for its weaving heritage and Indigenous craftsmanship. This helps preserve traditional skills while supporting the communities who continue to practise them.
We believe in slow production because the best pieces are not rushed.
A blanket should not be a throwaway purchase. It should be something you use, care for, travel with and return to season after season. Natural fibres like alpaca and llama wool offer warmth, durability and lasting comfort, making them beautifully suited to life between home and elsewhere.
Folded across a bed.Packed into the van.Wrapped around shoulders beside the fire.Laid over a camp bed beneath canvas.
These are pieces made to move with you.
Our blankets honour the heritage of Andean fibre and craft while finding a new place in Australian open-air living. They connect old materials with modern rituals: slow weekends, cool nights, warm fires, open roads and the quiet comfort of making a place your own.
In choosing alpaca and llama wool, we choose natural warmth, thoughtful making and a slower kind of comfort.
Made by hand.Made to last.Made for a home elsewhere.
NATURAL FIBRES, MADE FOR LIFE OUTSIDE
There is a reason alpaca and llama wool have been used for generations in cold, high-altitude climates.
Soft, warm, breathable and hardwearing, these natural fibres are beautifully suited to life between home and elsewhere, from cool nights in a bell tent, to mornings in the van, to slow evenings by the fire.
INSULATING WITHOUT THE BULK
Alpaca and llama fibres are naturally insulating, helping hold warmth close while still allowing the body to breathe. This makes them ideal for layering across changing conditions, warm enough for cold nights, but comfortable enough for year-round use.
They offer warmth without the heavy, bulky feeling of synthetic bedding, making them easy to pack, carry, fold and live with.
BREATHABLE & TEMPERATURE REGULATING
Natural wool fibres help regulate comfort as temperatures shift. They keep warmth in when the air cools, while still allowing excess heat and moisture to move away from the body.
This makes alpaca and llama wool especially useful for camping, vanlife and open-air stays, where conditions can change quickly between afternoon sun, evening chill and cold overnight air.
ODOUR RESISTANT & NATURALLY ANTIMICROBIAL
Alpaca and llama wool are naturally resistant to odour, helping blankets stay fresher for longer between washes.
This matters outdoors. When you are camping, travelling or living from a van, bedding is not always washed as often as it would be at home. Natural fibre helps make that more practical - staying comfortable, breathable and fresh with proper airing and care.
HARDWEARING BY NATURE
These are not delicate decorative throws. Alpaca and llama wool are known for their strength, warmth and long-lasting comfort.
Many of our blankets include a small synthetic component to support durability, helping them handle regular use, packing, layering, folding and travel. The result is a blanket that still feels soft and natural, but is better suited to real life outdoors.
QUICK DRYING & EASY TO AIR
Alpaca and llama wool are practical fibres for changing conditions. They manage moisture well, dry relatively quickly compared with heavier bedding, and can be aired between uses.
For camping, cabins, vanlife and weekends away, this makes them a considered alternative to bulky bedding that holds dampness or odour.
NATURALLY FLAME-RESISTANT
Wool fibres are naturally more flame-resistant than many synthetic textiles. They are less likely to ignite, do not melt or drip, and generally self-extinguish when the flame source is removed.
This does not make them fireproof, and all blankets should still be kept a safe distance from open flames, sparks, heaters and campfires. But for life outdoors, natural wool offers a quiet practical advantage over many synthetic alternatives.
MADE TO BE KEPT
The best blanket is not the one you replace every season.
Alpaca and llama wool are chosen for lasting comfort: soft enough for the bedroom, warm enough for the campsite, and durable enough to move with you between the two.
These are pieces to fold across the bed, pack into the van, wrap around shoulders by the fire and bring back out year after year.