








🧢 Elevate your everyday look with the ultimate multifunctional headwear!
The VANCROWN Headband Neck Gaiter is a 12-in-1 multifunctional accessory made from 100% polyester microfiber, offering breathability, quick-drying, and sweat absorption. With over 200 designs across 32 series, it fits head sizes 21.25 to 25 inches comfortably. Tested for safety and durability by SGS and INTERTEK, it’s perfect for professionals seeking versatile, stylish, and reliable headwear for work, sport, or casual wear.
| ASIN | B0DDKSXL97 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 2,707,178 in Fashion ( See Top 100 in Fashion ) 4,123 in Men's Scarves |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (11,382) |
| Date First Available | 19 Aug. 2024 |
N**Y
These buffs are great! The blue, green, turquoise and purple colors are beautiful. My husband and I shared the selection. There are styles that are masculine for him. I have been using them as a neck warmer when I go for walks on cold mornings. Excellent!
W**Y
These will run you $10-$20 a piece in stores or if you decide to order from a big brand. They are cheapesr here on Amazon. The colors they come with are very specific to the ones pictured. Doesn't seem cheaply made either on the material. I've washed mine 4 times already and they have still retained their stretchiness. They come with an instruction booklet showing the several different ways you can tie it to wear it but I'd recommend getting on YouTube and looking up hoo rag video. These are not hoo rag brand but they are very similar. I myself can't see a difference and when you Google how much hoo rags cost, you will end up buying these, especially if you are using them to fish or or water and have to worry about losing one in the water because it flies off on the boat. They do a fantastic job at keeping your head cool in the sun to keeping your neck from getting g sunburned. I have very long hair so I usually end up wearing it when I work on cars to keep my hair out of my face because everytime I try to wear a baseball cap it ends up getting hit on something and knocked off
K**1
Stays stretchy. Wide. Works perfectly. Pretty colors.
G**Y
Nice colors, fit well once I figure out how they work.
A**N
TL;DR: Giant tubes that you can use as hair restraints, neck-warmers, face masks, and more (Wrap a yoga mat! use as a travel pillow cover! The possibilities are endless-ish!). Quite stretchy: I once put one on as a tube-top as a joke (I'm a slim dude, but still). Wicks sweat and keeps you from becoming the world's most disgusting sprinkler system when you're sweaty as heck. Staggering array of color choices. Highly recommended; will order again and again. Pro tip: Cut some in half (so one tube becomes two tubes) to make shorter hair wraps; leave some full length for versatility. You don't even have to seal the cut ends with a lighter. My Mom bought me a set of these, and shortly thereafter I added a second set. I kind of love them, you guys. I'm a ballet dancer and I sweat like a cold drink on a muggy afternoon (read: profusely and unstoppably). Heretofore, my answer has been to just keep my hair really short so it doesn't fling sweat all over everybody, but with Petipa's Sleeping Beauty in the mix this season a more old-fashioned look was in order. A while back I bought a wide Alice band to keep things contained, but at $6 for one band, it didn't make sense for someone whose work involves sweating balls all day, 5-6 days/week. Moreover, the one I bought was a little narrower than I really wanted it to be. It did control both sweat and hair, but had to be washed every couple of days, which was inconvenient. These things solved both problems. I was worried that they'd overheat my head: they don't. I was worried that they wouldn't wick sweat: they do. I was worried that they'd be impractically long: they aren't. I did cut some into two shorter tubes, and I use both those and the full-length ones more or less interchangeably. Note: If you want a headband less than half the length of these, consider using a half-length section doubled over and sewn in one spot (I'll post a pic ASAP). The fabric is very thin, and I've found that shorter sections tend just to roll up unless you do something along those lines. I now use these every day in class and rehearsal--in fact, I use them frequently outside of the studio as well. I machine wash these in cold water (hot water is bad for stretchy fabrics, generally) and tumble dry them on low heat, usually in a zippered mesh bag to keep them together. So far, they're holding up quite well, considering the abuse they take on a daily basis. Another pro tip: wash and dry these (and any wicking fabric, and also towels) without fabric softener. Fabric softener forms a coating on fabrics that prevents them from wicking sweat properly. I'm planning on taking a bunch of these with me to Burning Man this year to see how they do in a profoundly inhospitable environment. I'll report back, of course. Overall, I really like these and recommend them. They won't mow your lawn and build you a deck, but they'll manage your hair and sweat while you do, and that's pretty good!
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