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Nous avons toujours défendu le principe de
durabilité, et nous visons également à sensibiliser
le public à la conservation de l'environnement. Il est de notre devoir de
fournir des produits de haute qualité, et nous nous efforçons de
veiller à ce qu'ils soient bien entretenus, augmentant ainsi
leur durée de vie.

The Tie Knot Guide — SILKAVO
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[ HERO IMAGE — see prompt #1 ]
The SILKAVO Guide

The Art of the Knot

A tie is a small decision with a large effect. Learn the four knots worth knowing — and find the one that becomes yours.

Where it begins

Four knots. One quiet language.

There are dozens of ways to tie a necktie, but only a handful are worth committing to memory. Each one shapes the silk differently — a touch wider here, a little more relaxed there — and the right choice depends on your collar, the occasion, and the kind of impression you want to leave.

Our silk is woven in China, home to one of the oldest silk traditions in the world, and finished with a hand-rolled edge that gives the knot its quiet body and lasting shape. Below, we walk through the four knots we return to most.

“The knot is where intention meets silk.”
SILKAVO
[ FOUR-IN-HAND KNOT — see prompt #2 ]
01

The Four-in-Hand

Also known as · Régate / the Sailor's Knot
Difficulty Easy

The everyday classic. Slightly asymmetric and beautifully understated, it adapts to almost any tie and collar — and reads especially well on button-down and point collars. Its slim, slightly elongated shape flatters most face shapes and is the knot many well-dressed men wear nearly every day.

Collar: Point, button-down Occasion: Everyday, business Shape: Slim, tapered
  1. Drape the tie with the wide end (A) on your right, hanging about 30 cm below the narrow end (B).
  2. Cross the wide end (A) over the narrow end (B).
  3. Wrap (A) fully behind (B) and bring it back across the front.
  4. Pass (A) up through the neck loop from underneath.
  5. Bring (A) down through the front loop you just created, and tighten gently toward the collar.
[ HALF-WINDSOR KNOT — see prompt #3 ]
02

The Half-Windsor

Also known as · Single Windsor
Difficulty Moderate

A neat, symmetrical triangle that sits comfortably between the slim Four-in-Hand and the broad Windsor. Versatile and polished, it suits medium-spread and point collars and is at home in both business and evening settings. A dependable choice when you want a little more presence without going bold.

Collar: Medium spread, point Occasion: Business, evening Shape: Balanced triangle
  1. Drape the tie with the wide end (A) on your right, well below the narrow end (B).
  2. Cross (A) over (B), then bring (A) up and behind, passing it under the neck loop.
  3. Bring (A) down and around the front of the knot from right to left.
  4. Pass (A) up through the neck loop again.
  5. Slide (A) down through the front loop, then draw the knot up snug to the collar.
[ WINDSOR KNOT — see prompt #4 ]
03

The Windsor

Also known as · Full Windsor / Double Windsor
Difficulty Advanced

Wide, symmetrical, and quietly commanding. The Windsor was popularised by the Duke of Windsor in the 1930s and remains the knot for formal moments — weddings, ceremonies, and occasions that ask for a little gravity. Its broad triangle is built for spread and cutaway collars, where smaller knots would look lost.

Collar: Spread, cutaway Occasion: Formal, ceremonial Shape: Wide, symmetrical
  1. Drape the tie with the wide end (A) hanging well below the narrow end (B).
  2. Cross (A) over (B), then bring (A) up through the neck loop and down on the right.
  3. Wrap (A) behind to the left, then up through the neck loop again, draping down on the left.
  4. Bring (A) across the front from left to right.
  5. Pass (A) up through the neck loop a final time, then down through the front loop. Tighten evenly for a balanced triangle.
[ PRATT KNOT — see prompt #5 ]
04

The Pratt

Also known as · Pratt-Shelby
Difficulty Moderate

A refined middle ground — medium-sized, tidy, and symmetrical, without the volume of a full Windsor. The Pratt begins inside-out, which keeps the seam hidden and the finish clean. A favourite of those who want a polished, proportionate knot that works with most collars and most days.

Collar: Most, esp. spread Occasion: Versatile, day to evening Shape: Medium, symmetrical
  1. Start with the tie inside-out, wide end (A) on your right, crossed under the narrow end (B).
  2. Bring (A) up and pass it down through the neck loop.
  3. Bring (A) across the front from left to right.
  4. Pass (A) up through the neck loop from underneath.
  5. Slide (A) down through the front loop and tighten gently to the collar.
Watch & Learn

The knot, in motion

Sometimes a single, unhurried demonstration says more than any diagram. Watch each knot tied slowly, in natural light, on SILKAVO silk.

[ TUTORIAL VIDEO — see video brief below ]
Find Your Knot

Which knot is yours?

Answer two quick questions and we'll suggest the knot that suits your collar and the moment.

What's your collar?
And the occasion?
Your knot

The Four-in-Hand

A slim, understated classic that flatters most collars and faces — the knot to wear when you'd rather not think about it.

Shop Ties See How to Tie It
Keep It Beautiful

Caring for silk

01

Untie after wear

Always loosen and fully untie your tie at the end of the day. Leaving a knot in place stresses the silk and sets permanent creases.

02

Rest and roll

Hang your tie or roll it loosely to let the silk relax. Most light wrinkles fall out on their own within a day.

03

Steam, don't iron

If a crease lingers, use gentle steam rather than a hot iron. Keep silk away from moisture, perfume, and rough surfaces.

The Edit

A tie worth the knot.

Explore SILKAVO silk ties — 100% mulberry silk, hand-rolled edges, and patterns chosen for the way they sit in the light.

Shop Silk Ties