How to Tie a Pareo: Eight Steps for Summer

5 minutes read
Wear & Tie

How to Tie a Pareo: Eight Steps for Summer

A hand-drawn fabric, a single gesture, and the silhouette transforms. The pareo is not just a beach accessory: it is a work of art in its own right that comes to life in the hands of the person tying it. A dress when stepping out of the water, a skirt for strolling across a terrace, a shawl for evenings when the light lingers. Our cotton, linen, and silk scarves share the shapes and fluidity of the traditional pareo, ready to be draped from morning until late in the evening.


Eight ways to transform a single room for an entire season.


01. The knot at the waist

30 seconds

This is the first sarong, the one you learn to tie with your feet in the sand. The fabric drapes behind your lower back, the panels meet at the hip, and the knot ties itself almost without thinking. The skirt takes shape, long and flowing, higher to elongate the silhouette, lower for a Mediterranean drape.

A cotton scarf works wonders here; its softness hugs the hips and its fluid drape lets the print shine.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Place the sarong on your back, parallel to the ground, at the desired height
  2. Bring both ends toward one hip
  3. Tie a flat knot, let the panels fall

02. The dress tied at the back of the neck

30 seconds

The sarong turns into a dress in two simple steps. Drape the fabric across your chest, bring the ends up under your arms, and tie them together behind your neck. Your skin is still warm, the fabric stays in place, and the day continues without a detour to the locker room. It’s the statement piece that transforms the end of a swim into an impromptu lunch.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Hold the sarong in front of you, centering it over your chest
  2. Bring each end under your armpits, toward the back
  3. Bring the ends behind your neck and tie them at the nape


03. The draped stole

30 seconds

The simplest of knots, the one that transforms a look in an instant. Worn as a headband, across the forehead, or wrapped high like a crown: three ways to complete your look. Silk for a touch of luxury, cotton for coolness on summer days.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Fold the pareo into a narrow headband, lengthwise
  2. Wrap it around your head, crossing it over your forehead if desired
  3. Tie it on the side or at the back


04. The bandeau dress

1 minute

Shorter, sunnier. The sarong wraps around the bust and under the arms, with the knot positioned to the side. Choose a fabric that flatters your figure fine cotton or lightweight linen for a clean, crisp look.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Wrap the sarong around your bust and under your arms
  2. Cross the ends at the back
  3. Bring them forward and tie them on one side


05. The Single Shoulder

2 minutes

A diagonal silhouette, almost sculptural. The drape evokes ancient fabrics, yet the look remains contemporary. Silk for dinners, linen for beach weddings: the fabric defines the style of the knot.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Drape the sarong over one shoulder, with the center resting on the collarbone
  2. Bring both ends under the opposite arm
  3. Tie at the hip, on the side of the free shoulder


06. The wrap skirt

1 minute

More structured than a simple skirt, the sarong folds over itself like an envelope. Paired with a lightweight tank top and flat sandals, it blends right into the city without drawing attention. Opt for cotton or linen, as their drape flatters the figure.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Wrap the sarong around your waist like a towel
  2. Fold one side over the other, crossing them
  3. Tie it on the side, at the hip


07. The Light Cape

1 minute

A wrap-around knot, perfect for when the wind picks up on the terrace. The fabric provides protection without feeling heavy, and the movement remains fluid. Linen is particularly well-suited to this drape; its lively texture gives the cape a subtle texture.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Drape the sarong around your back, like a cape
  2. Bring both ends forward and cross them over your chest
  3. Bring them back around your back and tie


08. The Turban

30 seconds

The simplest of knots, the one that transforms a look in an instant. Worn as a headband, across the forehead, or wrapped high like a crown: three ways to complete your look. Silk for a touch of luxury, cotton for coolness on summer days.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Fold the pareo into a narrow headband, lengthwise
  2. Wrap it around your head, crossing it over your forehead if desired
  3. Tie it on the side or at the back

The fabric that makes the move

A well-tied sarong starts with the right fabric. Our scarf-style pareo range from 70 x 190 to 100 x 195 centimeters, with each size inspiring different ways to wear them. The widest pieces, around 100 x 190 centimeters, allow for endless variations, from a dress to a cape. The narrower sizes lend themselves to fluid draping: a shawl, a single-shoulder wrap, or a turban.

Three fabrics, three personalities. Cotton, fine and fluid, follows the movement and reveals the print in every fold. Linen, lively and sculpting, structures the silhouette. Silk, rarer, glides like a breath of air, reserved for drapings that respect its delicacy.

One piece, a thousand ways to wear it. This is the invitation to travel that the house offers, season after season.


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