Hoxton knot
The Hoxton knot,[1] Chelsea knot,[2] French loop,[3] Parisian scarf knot[4] or Snug Tug[5] is a method of arranging a scarf about the neck. The scarf is doubled back and placed around the neck. The tails of the scarf are then pulled through the U-bend of the doubling to secure them, as with a cow hitch or lark's head.
The knot is popular with stylish young men like David Beckham who frequent fashionable districts of London such as Hoxton and Chelsea.[1] The style is also commonly used by outside broadcasters from the BBC as it is warm and tidy.[3] It may be controversial though, as some commentators opine that knotting a scarf is less manly than just draping it around the neck or throwing the ends casually over the shoulder.[6]
See also
- Snood — the snug, tubular comforter which generated similar controversy when worn by football players.
References
- 1 2 Nicole Brydson (2007), "The Smug Tug", The New York Observer
- ↑ Caroline Davies (12 Apr 2008), "How should men wear a scarf?", The Daily Telegraph
- 1 2 Harry de Quetteville (2 Dec 2010), "A man shall be defined by his scarf", The Daily Telegraph
- ↑ John Bridges, Bryan Curtis (2003), A gentleman gets dressed up, p. 40, ISBN 978-1-4016-0111-9
- ↑ Julie Bindel (31 October 2006), "Tying me up in knots", The Guardian
- ↑ Paul MacInnes (26 January 2007), "Tied up in knots - Traditional, macho, metrosexual or just a bit chilly - is the way in which a man wears his scarf really that telling?", The Guardian
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