Well, Lynn, that is one of the characteristics of this particular knot. But that action would not pull the knot itself very tight - I tried it, and the knot remains rather a loose one. That of course owes to the construction, with the end you are pulling at actually enlargening the small noose built into the knot and thus making it impossible to tighten the knot very firmly.
Otherwise it functions nicely, and if Stride was wearing the knot at the front, pulling from her back with the left hand could well move the knot to the left of the neck. One thing, though - if the scarf was loosely fit on her neck, then the noose would just swiwel instead of gripping the neck - it´s not until you fit it kind of tightly that your suggestion works. But this you will already know, I trust.
Moreover, you must grip the right end to be able to tighten it around the neck - only one of them does the trick.
As for the "handkerchief scarf" I have taken a look at Google once again, and found handkerchief scarves the size of an elephant hide, more or less. If this applied in Victorian days too, we can let go of the idea that the scarf must have been tiny!
The best,
Fisherman
Otherwise it functions nicely, and if Stride was wearing the knot at the front, pulling from her back with the left hand could well move the knot to the left of the neck. One thing, though - if the scarf was loosely fit on her neck, then the noose would just swiwel instead of gripping the neck - it´s not until you fit it kind of tightly that your suggestion works. But this you will already know, I trust.
Moreover, you must grip the right end to be able to tighten it around the neck - only one of them does the trick.
As for the "handkerchief scarf" I have taken a look at Google once again, and found handkerchief scarves the size of an elephant hide, more or less. If this applied in Victorian days too, we can let go of the idea that the scarf must have been tiny!
The best,
Fisherman
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