A beginner crocheted scarf in soft yarn showing simple stitch rows
project Beginner

How to Crochet a Scarf — A Beginner

A basic crochet scarf is a rectangle of any stitch you like worked in rows until the scarf is the length you want. A standard adult scarf is 15–20 cm wide

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On this page
  1. Why a scarf is the perfect first wearable
  2. Choosing the right size
  3. Choosing yarn and hook for a scarf
  4. Choosing a stitch for your scarf
  5. How to crochet a simple scarf — step by step
  6. Common scarf mistakes (and quick fixes)
  7. Scarf stitch variations worth trying

ByMaya Okonkwo·Crochet lead

7 min read·Updated April 2026

The short answer

A basic crochet scarf is a rectangle of any stitch you like worked in rows until the scarf is the length you want. A standard adult scarf is 15–20 cm wide and 150–180 cm long, using about 250–350 g of aran yarn. Beginners can finish a chunky single-colour scarf in 6–10 hours, or a double crochet scarf in aran yarn in 10–15 hours. It’s the most forgiving first wearable project.

In this piece

  • 01Why a scarf is the perfect first wearable
  • 02Choosing the right size
  • 03Choosing yarn and hook for a scarf
  • 04Choosing a stitch for your scarf
  • 05How to crochet a simple scarf — step by step
  • 06Common scarf mistakes (and quick fixes)
  • 07Scarf stitch variations worth trying

Why a scarf is the perfect first wearable

A scarf is the simplest wearable project in crochet. No shaping, no fitting, no working in the round. You pick a stitch, work rows until the scarf is long enough, and finish off. That’s it.

Unlike a hat, you can’t get the size wrong. Unlike socks or mittens, there are no matching pieces. Unlike a jumper, there’s no gauge drama. If you’ve finished a dishcloth or two, you’re ready for a scarf — and at the end of it, you’ve got something you (or a gift recipient) will actually wear.

Most beginners complete their first crochet scarf in week 2–3 of learning, and scarves remain one of the most-given handmade gifts because they fit anyone.

Choosing the right size

Standard adult scarf dimensions: width 15–20 cm, length 150–180 cm. Children’s scarves: width 12–15 cm, length 120–140 cm.

Wider scarves (20–25 cm) look more like wraps and sit differently around the neck — still wearable, but more of a statement. Narrower scarves (10–12 cm) are skimpier and feel less substantial. 15–20 cm is the sweet spot for most adult scarves.

Length is mostly personal preference. 150 cm wraps comfortably around the neck once. 180 cm wraps twice with short tails. 200+ cm is a ‘can wrap twice with dramatic tails’ length. We recommend 150–170 cm for a first scarf — enough to be useful, not so much it feels endless to make.

If you’re working the scarf as a gift, err on the longer side. A 180 cm scarf is more useful to more people than a 140 cm scarf.

Choosing yarn and hook for a scarf

Yarn weight dramatically affects time and feel. Chunky yarn on a 6–8mm hook: 6–10 hour scarf, very cosy. Aran yarn on a 5mm hook: 10–15 hour scarf, classic-feeling. DK yarn on a 4mm hook: 15–25 hour scarf, lighter and more tailored.

Our recommendation for a first scarf: aran weight in a wool-blend yarn. Drops Nepal aran (wool-alpaca) or Lion Brand Wool-Ease aran — both warm, soft, washable (check labels). About 3 balls (300 g) for a 15×170 cm scarf. Cost: £9–15.

For a quick-win first scarf, consider super-chunky yarn. Drops Polaris or Wool and the Gang Crazy Sexy Wool work up into an impressive scarf in 4–6 hours. Uses about 200–250 g. More expensive per ball (~£8–15) but a dramatic finished result.

Avoid pure cotton for scarves — it doesn’t have the warmth or drape of wool-blends. Avoid pure wool unless the recipient will hand-wash. A wool-acrylic blend is usually the best all-rounder.

Hook: 5mm for aran, 6mm for chunky, 8mm for super-chunky. We use the Clover Amour for ergonomic comfort; full kit breakdown on our crochet starter kit page.

Choosing a stitch for your scarf

The stitch you pick changes the whole feel of the scarf — speed, texture, yarn usage.

Double crochet: fastest, classic, slightly open feel. Good drape. Most common beginner scarf stitch. See how to double crochet for the technique.

Half-double crochet: slightly slower, denser, warmer. Softer hand-feel than dc. See how to half-double crochet.

Single crochet: slowest for scarves, very dense and warm, but takes twice as long as dc for the same length. Not ideal unless you specifically want a stiff narrow scarf.

Decorative stitches: moss stitch (woven-looking, elegant), shell stitch (decorative fan pattern), bobble stitch (tactile texture — great for a statement piece).

For a first scarf, we recommend double crochet or half-double crochet. Save decorative stitches for your second scarf once you’re confident in reading your own work.

How to crochet a simple scarf — step by step

This is a simple double crochet scarf in aran yarn, finished dimensions roughly 15×170 cm.

Step 1. Gather materials: 3 balls of aran yarn (about 300 g), a 5mm crochet hook (Clover Amour), scissors, and a tapestry needle for weaving in ends.

Step 2. Make a foundation chain. For a 15 cm wide scarf in aran yarn, chain about 30 stitches. (Aran yarn gives roughly 2 stitches per cm on a 5mm hook.) Keep your tension moderate — too tight and the chain will resist.

Step 3. Row 1: work double crochet into the fourth chain from the hook, then into each chain across. You should have 28 double crochets (the first three chains count as your first dc).

Step 4. Turn: chain 3, turn your work. The chain-3 counts as the first dc of the next row.

Step 5. Row 2: work double crochet into each stitch across. The last dc goes into the top of the chain-3 turning chain from the previous row.

Step 6. Repeat row 2 until the scarf is the length you want. For a 170 cm scarf in aran yarn, you’ll work approximately 130–150 rows.

Step 7. Measure periodically by stretching the scarf flat without pulling. Stop when it reaches your target length.

Step 8. Finish off: cut the yarn with a 15 cm tail, pull the tail through the last loop, weave the end in with a tapestry needle. Do the same for the starting tail.

Optional: add fringe or tassels to each end. Fringe is made by looping 20 cm pieces of yarn through the end stitches with the crochet hook. Adds 30–60 minutes but doubles the visual impact.

Common scarf mistakes (and quick fixes)

Scarf narrowing as you work. Usually because you’re missing the last stitch of each row (the one worked into the top of the previous row’s turning chain). Count stitches at the end of every 5–10 rows until it becomes second nature.

Uneven edges. Caused by inconsistent turning chains — some rows a chain-2 instead of chain-3, or skipping the turning chain altogether. Be meticulous for your first scarf; edges matter.

Scarf too narrow or too wide. If your starting chain was too few or too many stitches for the yarn weight, the whole scarf comes out wrong. Make a small 5 cm test swatch first and count stitches per cm before committing to a long scarf.

Running out of yarn mid-row. Frustrating. Weave the old yarn end in as you go, join the new ball at the start of a row (not mid-row), and continue. Don’t tie knots — they show.

Boredom at 50–70% done. Very common with long scarves. Break the work into weekly milestones (e.g. ‘15 more rows this week’) rather than thinking about the full length remaining.

Scarf stitch variations worth trying

Basketweave scarf. Uses front-post and back-post double crochet to create a woven-looking texture. More advanced but produces a visibly impressive finished piece.

Ribbed scarf (knit-look). Worked by alternating front-post and back-post double crochet in columns. Looks knitted to most non-crocheters. Great for people who want a crochet scarf that doesn’t ‘look crochet’.

Colour-block scarf. Three sections of different colours. Easier than striped patterns because you only change colour twice. See how to change colour in crochet.

Lace scarf. Open, airy, uses taller stitches and chains for drape. Not as warm but beautiful as a spring/autumn scarf. Attic24’s ‘Coast Blanket’ scarf variati

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