Which scarf knot do you wear? Comment below! ➡ ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-q3ysu3H8g0E.html - Click here to watch How To Dress Old Money Style In Winter (Timeless) 🟡 www.realmenrealstyle.com/10-masculine-scarf-knots/ - Click here to check out the article 10 Manly Ways To Tie A Scarf.
None of these I must admit. They are just too much effort, and look kinda extra in my opinion. But thank you for the inspiration, yesterday i bought a new scarf and it was both wider and longer than I realized. So I ended up just doing a personal variation of the 'Once Around', after watching your video.
The Parisian knot is where it's at for me. Easy to do and keeps my neck warm. I am virtually the only man I see in my city (in Texas) wearing a scarf when it gets cold out....and people treat me with so much respect when I do LOL. Everyone calls me sir; holds doors open for me....I get a little extra on my plate if I'm going out to eat. It's kinda cool.
Manly: wearing your scarf whatever way suits you, as long as it's doing its job keeping you warm. Unmanly: Caring about what total strangers on the internet have to say regarding the manner in which one wears one's scarf.
pretty much this. a scarf is for warmth. if someone makes fun of it when not worn in a ridiculous way they can not so kindly fuck off and focus on their own problems instead of how everyone else looks. It's just a scarf. it's not like I'm a fat dude in a crop top.
The four in hand is my favorite scarf knot and I've been using it the past years, I learned it from a previous video on RMRS and its stylish and warm, it's just perfect in my opinion
Pick the one style most people use as it is the most practical and make them think they are doing something socially wrong and wonder why...classic clickbait tactic. Some good scarf tips though, will still use the "wrong" one or a snood :-)
I saw this video when I had another thumbnail, they put the one in which something appears that is usual to use but as something that is wrong to capture attention again and thus watch the video again. This channel plays a lot with the thumbnails of each video, and some show something that is "wrong" when it is not, just to get your attention and watch the video. Don't pay attention to the thumbnails, just ignore them.
Hypothetically, if I were to wear a scarf, as a man, and didn't use one of these methods, would I have my man status revoked? Who decides whether me and my scarf are manly or unmanly? 🤔
some people attach too much importance to dictating to others how to dress!!! (this comment gives an example of the gentleman in the video) I agree with your comment!
@@therealisation5500 lol, I'm Canadian so it's everyday for me. You said heat, so I assumed Celsius. 25C is a beautiful summer day. It couldn't have been 25F because that's below freezing, right? :P
I wear kefiyahs instead of scarfs. They are versatile, have a more exotic flare, and are a good conversation starter as people love to ask where they came from. I have them from all over the middle east.
Scarves are really great accessories because they are elegant and classic and can still look casual. Even in summer there are lightweight scarves made of silk so I can be stylish in all season wearing scarves.
Wow. What a timely video for me in Toronto! I just got two Pashmina shawls and was wondering how on earth I was going to wear them with a coat and a jacket! Now I know.
I like to wear a 34"x34" silk wild rag. Twice around the neck for cold or windy weather, or just one time around if you like. Finish it up with a Japanese square knot or a scarf slide. Sizes and patterns vary greatly. Just like most other western wear items, they make a pretty bold statement and probably aren't going to be your first choice if you need to be dressier than casual.
Like tying a tie, getting the right drape on a scarf takes practice in front of a mirror. When done right, rocking a scarf brings the whole ensemble together and kicks off a fantastic style conversation.
I remember my High School German Teacher wore the "four-in-hand" knot, and I had to learns it! I find that twisting the loop in the opposite direction makes for a flatter knot, that can fit neatly under a jacket! Those early airplanes' engines had Total Loss Oiling Systems, where a small amount of oil would end up escaping with the exhaust after each combustion stroke -- right at the top of the engine, toward the pilot's face. Early aviators and aviatrixes used the scarf to not only keep warm, but also to protect their faces from that hot motor oil.
Not to mention it was castor oil that was used, which is a fairly potent natural laxative, which would do exactly as expected if it was accidentally consumed
12th way. Drap over neck with one end slightly longer than the over. From the top the the longer length, pull the fabric length up and around in front of your neck towards the other side and close your jacket up so as to keep it in place. Has the additional advantage of not being a choke hazard.
Just saw this and glad I check before commenting; I've worked VIP security for a few decades and the last thing you want is something around your neck that a perp can grab, control, and chock you.
I texted you yesterday about Levi jeans ! I bought a pair of black slim leg jeans from Levi, Elastic stretch. I am not good at picking Jeans, your info helped enormously. 😅 They look excellent for my body type. I will use your site often. However, your last video wasn't applicable for me, as I live in a warmer climate, and actually, summer is coming here. But in N.America scarfs are a good idea. I prefer white silk scarfs. They look elegant and keep the body warmer than any other material. And they make a man look like a WW1 fighter pilot😅 . Looking forward to your next video😊 Mike.
I use some sort of black/gray tartan scarf, wrapped around, cowboy style with a black leather jacket. I also used the Parisian style. I never imagined that there's such a thing as an 'unmanly' style. Nor did I care. I couldn't care less what others wear or how they wear it, and they better mind their own business too. Some people have too much time on their hands.
I noticed the trend here (Switzerland) that as soon it gets a bit cold, women start to wear almost comically lage scafs which cover most of their body and head. 😅 For me, right now, it's the double wrap. With one wrap tight around the neck, the 2nd one loose, and the ends tucked into the jacket.
I live between Lausanne and Geneva (moved here about 14 months ago) and I had the same observation these past few weeks! 🤣. Some of these scarves could double as a quilt!
I own and wear a long white cashmere scarf, that is actually meant for women. It doesn't make me less manly, though. It's warm, it saved me through several cases of cold, influenza, 'rona and always gave me warmth and comfort - best 100 bucks i ever spent on a small piece of clothing.
True, the scarf kept biplane pilots' necks warm, but they wore silk scarves to prevent chafing from constantly swiveling their heads looking for bandits.
Great video. I just bought a scarf online made of alpaca and merino wool it's going to be long for my body height but I see there are ways to deal with that in this video.
Does your plumber wear the Parisian knot lol? Jk That’s the only one I use. I would argue that’s the only manly one because it’s quick, warm. Should I powder my nose while putting those other time wasting knots…
Pilots used to wear a scarf not to keep warm (flights were just short hops back then), but to not scratch their necks while looking out for enemies and to cover their mouths to not ingest castrol oil from their engines. Rotary engines had so called open oil cycle, which means oil went from the oil reservoir, through engine and out via exhaust, hitting face of a pilot directly. And castrol oil is a really strong laxativum. The more you know.
My business partner tells me I have no style. Thankfully I found this account because I am THAT guy that buys 10 of the same pants and shirts and I’m good to go. I have to say, I wanted to buy a scarf this month, but I’ve never bought one or used one before. Surprisingly, my fiancé doesn’t mind my lack of style, but I want to step it up a few notches and dress more sophisticated. Thank you for your content!
I don't wear a scarf to keep my neck warm. I wear it over my mouth and cheeks but below my nose to keep my face warm without fogging up my glasses. In combination with a watch cap it's like a balaclava in two pieces.
This is such a fantastic video. I have been finding the unmanly knot very uncomfortable since long ao i used to just wrap the scarf or a tie kind of knot. I have the answer now. Many thanks. Class is something that money doesnt bring automatically.
As a man, I don’t wear a scarf as a fashion statement or accessory. I wrap the scarf around my neck once or twice, with one end left hanging over my chest, the other over my back. It takes me 5 seconds and I’ve got my coat on and I’m out the door, not giving a damn about how it looks, as long as it’s performing the function of keeping me warm.
This video shows numerous way to knot/tie a scarf which is functional as well as decorative. That’s fine. I take except to the usage of words “manly” and “unmanly” though. This is a semantics problem. The style anyone uses has no bearing on that. Some guys might simply be careless or sloppy or indifferent. I suggest you use words such as elegant, flamboyant, tasteful, artistic, business-like, etc.
Parisian knot works for me. BTW, I first learned how to do that knot from watching an old movie, "Legend of the Lost" (1957), in which John Wayne himself wears a scarf and ties it that way. You'll see him don the scarf and tie it in several scenes in the film - great demonstration! I discovered that I need a scarf nearly 8' long (92" or so) for it to work right for me, so I had my sister - an expert seamstress - craft a few of them for me using nearly 8' lengths of flannel. My neck and throat in the winter are kept very warm, and as such I'm free of colds or pneumonia, which is my reason for wearing them. I don't give two shits whether it looks "manly" or not. Eff that. If it was good enough for the Duke, it's good enough for me.
I've never worn a scarf in me life except for a footy match of course, and the only way I wear it is knotted to both wrists so that when I lift my hands up and outstretched it shows my team! Other than that it's just traipsed around my neck to get to the game.
I have a military surplus polish army babushka- scarv (~ 1m in lenght, ~ 18 cm wide, coyote brown and made of wool) that I usualy wear by laying it around my neck so that 1/3 lay on one and 2/3 on the other side of my chest. Then I take the shorter side, pull it gently in the opposite direction an tuck the longer side from behind it over and adjust it so both ends align with each other. works great ive you dont like overly complicatet and stiff knots in your neck area and it can be untied realy easyly and fast so you dont risk getting strangled to death in a barfight.
Whenever I order a kilt (I have more than a couple... 'wink-wink').. I always order a matching sash in the same tartan wool. Mostly because my wife likes the option of us 'matching' when we appear out in public & I am kilted. I sometimes... okay.... a LOT of the time... 'borrow' these to wear as accent scarfs because of the length.
Not sure why the thumbnail suggests that the Parisian is unmanly. Anyway, this leaves out the excellent use of a scarf to cover the nose and mouth in very windy and/or freezing weather when used together with a hood. It's predicted to be 4-5 degrees out at night this weekend and you can be sure I'll have a scarf sealing up everything but my eyes tucked into my hooded parka while walking the dog.
Great video. Often use the Parisien knot- hey I live in France so il faut...but freezing here at the moment so will try the Four- in-hand tomorrow. Do you have a similar video for cravats?🧣
Can't stand cold, and getting worse as I get older. Scarves have freed me to get out on cold days or walk the dog. More functional for me, just glad it's also stylish.
That's fashion for you. What's comfortable is considered feminism. Seriously just look at down jackets. Most of them on guys are waist long and open neck. But high warm collar and knee length for girls. Who said men doesn't freeze around the neck and legs 🤔