How to Tie a Silk Scarf on Your Head: 8 Elegant Hair Styles
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A silk scarf is the most versatile hair accessory you own. It can replace a headband, tame a bad-hair day, protect your hair overnight, or turn a plain outfit into something deliberate and polished. Here are eight ways to wear a silk scarf on your head—from the simplest five-second wrap to statement styles worthy of a dinner reservation.
Each tie works best with a specific size. The 22″ square is ideal for hair accents; the 36″ square gives you enough fabric for turbans and full wraps. Not sure what size you need? Read our guide.
1. The Classic Headband (5 seconds)
The easiest silk scarf hair style. Works with every outfit.
- Fold your scarf diagonally into a triangle, then roll from the point toward the long edge until you have a soft band about 2–3 inches wide.
- Place the center of the band at the back of your neck.
- Bring the ends up over your head and tie a single knot on top, slightly offset from center. Let the tails hang or tuck them under.
Best size: 22″ or 26″ square. A 36″ is too bulky for a headband.
2. The Top Knot Headband (Alice-in-Wonderland Style)
Same fold as the classic headband, but tied at the top of your head with a visible bow or knot.
- Create the same rolled band as above.
- Place the center under your hair at the nape.
- Bring the ends forward and cross them at the top of your head, over your hairline.
- Tie a small bow or knot with the ends pointing outward.
This adds height and frames the face. Works with high ponytails or hair left down.
3. The 60s Kerchief
A classic look that instantly elevates casual hair.
- Fold the scarf into a triangle.
- Place the long edge across your forehead, with the triangle point hanging down over the back of your hair.
- Pull the two long ends down and around to the back of your neck.
- Tie in a loose knot at the nape, under your hair.
Best size: 22″ or 26″ square. Works beautifully with a ponytail, loose waves, or a low bun.
4. The Full Head Wrap (Bandana Style)
Protects hair and looks polished—great for windy days, travel, or protecting a fresh blowout.
- Fold the scarf into a triangle.
- Hold the long edge across your forehead.
- Pull the ends behind your head and cross them at the back, over the triangle point.
- Bring the ends forward again and tie a small knot at your hairline.
- Tuck the loose point in under the band at the back.
Best size: 36″ or 26″ square, depending on hair volume.
5. The Pony Wrap
Adds polish to any ponytail in under 30 seconds. This is the secret weapon of stylists on runway crews.
- Pull your hair into a ponytail and secure with an elastic.
- Take a 22″ square, fold into a narrow rolled band.
- Wrap the band around the base of the ponytail twice.
- Tie a loose bow or knot at the side of the ponytail.
The tails of the scarf will hang down with your hair, adding movement.
6. The Bun Wrap
Formal, elegant, and takes a little practice. Works best with medium-to-long hair.
- Pull your hair into a low or mid-height bun and secure.
- Fold the scarf into a 3-inch band (as for the headband tie).
- Wrap the band around the bun twice.
- Tie in a knot or small bow at the base of the bun.
- Arrange the tails to cascade—or tuck them into the bun for a cleaner look.
Best size: 26″ or 36″ square depending on bun size.
7. The Turban
The most dramatic silk scarf style. Best learned in front of a mirror the first time.
- Take a 36″ square (22″ is too small for a full turban).
- Fold the scarf into a triangle, then keep folding the long edge up until you have a wide band about 6–8 inches deep.
- Place the center of the band at the back of your neck.
- Bring the ends up over your head and cross them at the front, above your hairline.
- Twist the ends once, then bring them to the back and tie a knot under the band.
- Tuck the ends in or let them drape over one shoulder.
The turban covers most of the hair and is ideal for growing out a cut, second-day hair, or making a statement with minimal jewelry.
8. The Silk Hair Protector (Overnight)
Not a style—a care technique. Silk protects hair from friction and breakage while you sleep, retains moisture, and prevents frizz.
- Before bed, gather your hair into a loose, low bun or pineapple (wrap hair up to the crown).
- Take a 36″ square and fold into a triangle.
- Wrap as in the Full Head Wrap (style 4), with the long edge at your hairline and the triangle point at the back.
- Tie at the nape under your hair.
- Sleep.
Your hair will wake up smoother, less frizzy, and with next-day styling intact. Cotton pillowcases cause friction damage; silk does not.
How to Pick the Right Scarf Size for Your Hair
| Hair Style | Recommended Size |
|---|---|
| Headband, kerchief, pony wrap | 22″ square |
| Full head wrap, bun wrap | 26″ or 36″ square |
| Turban, overnight protection | 36″ square |
| Statement styling, layered looks | 36″ square |
Longer rectangular scarves (also called oblong) work for ponytail wraps and pirate-style head wraps but have less versatility for everyday head styling.
Styling Tips from Our NYC Studio
- Pair your scarf pattern with your hair color. Warm blondes and redheads: earth tones, terracottas, mustards. Cool brunettes and black hair: jewel tones, deep blues, emeralds. Grey or silver: pastels, ivories, soft prints.
- Tie loose, not tight. Silk slips—if you pull hard to secure the knot, you'll crease the fabric. Tie it snug but gentle.
- Keep one in your bag. A 22″ square folded flat takes up no space and saves any bad-hair situation.
Caring for Silk After It's Been on Your Head
Hair oils, sunscreen, and perfume can transfer to silk through regular wear on your head. To keep your scarves pristine, spot clean any visible residue and rotate your collection so no single scarf gets worn multiple days in a row. Full washing advice here: How to Clean and Care for a Silk Scarf.
Shop Head-Friendly Silk Scarves
Every Leeloo + Zohan scarf is 100% silk habotai—the same fabric used in the finest head wraps and turbans for over a century. We print original artworks in editions, so no two collections repeat.
- Shop the full silk scarf collection
- Trade & wholesale inquiries (gallery shops, museum stores, boutiques)