How To Make A Scout Scarf / Necker
- Sizing: Neckers are often made too small and occasionally too big. See below for proper sizing.
- Cloth Orientation: If the cloth is not oriented correctly to
the necker, the necker will be very difficult to role and will not hang
properly. A necker has one long side and two short sides. The long side
must be parallel to the warp or weft of the cloth. The two short sides
must be parallel to the bias. This
image shows how the threads in the cloth must be oriented:
- Cut a right-isosceles triangle of the main colour. Follow the sizing below and make sure the two short sides are parallel to the bias.
- Finish the long edge of the necker (without any trim). It the necker does not have trim, finish all the sides. (If the long edge is the finished edge of the bolt of cloth, no edging is needed.)
- Cut 10 cm (4″) wide strips of the trim colour.
- Fold the trim strips in half, press, open out, and fold the raw edges towards centre fold (similar to bias tape). The finished stripes on the edges should be 2.5 cm (1″) wide.
- Attach the trim to the two short sides of the triangles and finish the ends by turning inside, making a point. At the point where the two short sides meet, the two pieces of trim should meet at a seam 45° from each side, so that it is symmetrical.
- If there is a crest, sew it to the right angled point so that it is about 1 cm (½″) from the trim.
Proper Sizing
Neckers tend to be made too small. Sometimes, they are made too big. Please follow these standard sizes. These sizes are for the finished necker. When cutting, cut enough extra to allow for whatever edging you will be doing.The small size is for Beavers. The regular size fits most youth (except Beavers) and many adults. Larger Scouts and adults should wear the long size.
Necker Size | Long Side | Two Short Sides |
---|---|---|
Small | 93 cm (36¾″) | 66 cm (26″) |
Regular | 106 cm (41¾″) | 75 cm (29½″) |
Long | 125 cm (49¼″) | 88 cm (34¾″) |