Hermes: Twilly scarf

Added May 6, 2025By Lenacurrentlywearing

Why are you into it?

Tried it twice—still thinking about it.

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About

The Hermès Twilly scarf isn't trying to be noticed. It's a thin ribbon of silk, barely five inches wide, that transforms into whatever you need it to be. Tie it around your wrist like a bracelet. Thread it through a bag handle. Wrap it around your neck for the kind of effortless accent that only comes from decades of refinement. The French house launched the format in 2013, understanding that luxury sometimes means making less, not more.

Every Twilly carries the weight of Hermès' 185-year history compressed into 86 centimeters of silk twill. The printing process requires up to 27 different screens for a single design. Each colorway gets its own production run. The result feels casual until you examine it closely, then you realize nothing about it is accidental. The hand-rolled edges. The precise registration of colors. The way it holds a knot without slipping.

Designs range from equestrian motifs that nod to the brand's saddlery origins to contemporary interpretations of classic Hermès scarves. Some feature details pulled from the archives, others debut patterns created specifically for the format. The "Twilly d'Hermès" perfume launched alongside the scarves, sharing the same spirit of playful restraint.

At around $200, it occupies the accessible end of Hermès pricing while delivering the full experience. The orange box. The ribbon. The knowledge that what you're holding will outlast trends because it never chased them in the first place. Other luxury houses have copied the format, but they miss the point. A Twilly works because it doesn't announce itself. It whispers.

Fun fact

Hermès designed the Twilly's exact 5cm width to thread perfectly through the hardware of a Birkin or Kelly bag handle.