Phone/whatsapp:+86177-2151-9382
Physical address:
Yangshanfan Road Intersection, Chengdong Village, Hengcun Town, Tonglu County, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang. China
Email address:
Quote@weaveessence.com
Fiber & Material Science — Yarn Science
Yarn Count System: Nm, Ne, Tex, Denier
How to read, convert, and specify yarn counts across the four major international systems used in scarf manufacturing specifications.
Count System Profiles
The Four Major Yarn Count Systems
Yarn count expresses linear density — the relationship between yarn weight and length. Four systems are in active global use for scarf manufacturing. Two are indirect (higher number = finer yarn); two are direct (higher number = coarser yarn). Mixing systems in a purchase order without explicit notation is one of the most common causes of wrong-specification yarn deliveries.
In indirect count systems, a higher number means a finer yarn. The number represents how much length you get per unit of weight — so a higher count means more length per gram, therefore thinner yarn.
Nm (Metric Number) is the number of metres of yarn per gram. Nm 30 = 30 metres per gram. It is the ISO-standard count system for wool, cashmere, and blend yarns, and is the dominant system used across Europe and Asia for knit and woven scarves. It is also the most universally applicable system across fiber types.
Ne (English Cotton Count) is the number of 840-yard hanks per pound of yarn. Ne 30 = 30 × 840 yards per pound. Ne remains the standard for cotton spinning in the US and UK markets. It is not directly interchangeable with Nm without conversion. Using Ne when Nm is expected — or vice versa — will result in yarn approximately 69% heavier or lighter than intended.
In direct count systems, a higher number means a coarser (heavier) yarn. The number represents weight per unit length — more grams per unit length means a thicker yarn.
Tex is the weight in grams per 1,000 metres of yarn. Tex 30 = 30 grams per 1,000m. Tex is the ISO-preferred system for technical specifications, test reports, and international standards — it appears in ISO fabric and yarn standards, Uster evenness reports, and inter-laboratory testing documentation. It is the most scientifically consistent system.
Denier is the weight in grams per 9,000 metres of yarn. Denier was originally developed for silk (the first filament fiber commercially processed). It remains the global standard for all filament yarns: polyester, nylon, and silk. When specifying woven or knit polyester scarves, denier is the expected count system. Dtex (decitex) = grams per 10,000m = Tex × 10, used in some European technical specifications.
Most scarf yarns are plied — two or more single yarns twisted together to form a stronger, more balanced yarn. The ply notation uses a forward slash to separate ply count from single yarn count. This notation is the most common source of misreading in purchase orders.
Nm 2/30 means 2 plies of Nm 30 single yarn twisted together. The resultant (final) count is Nm 30/2 = Nm 15. This is the count that determines fabric weight. A supplier quoting Nm 2/30 and a supplier quoting Nm 30 are offering very different yarns — the former is twice as heavy per metre. Always calculate and compare resultant counts, not single counts.
For filament yarns, the notation is different: 75D/36f means 75 denier total, with 36 individual filaments. Each filament is 75/36 = 2.08 denier. More filaments at the same total denier = finer individual filaments = softer, silkier surface feel. A 75D/72f yarn is perceptibly softer than 75D/36f, though both have the same fabric weight per unit area.
Conversion Reference
Full Yarn Count Conversion Tables
The tables below provide a complete cross-system conversion reference for the count ranges used in commercial scarf production, plus system usage guidance by fiber type and market.
| Nm (Metric) | Ne (English) | Tex | Denier | Typical Scarf Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Nm 7 |
Ne 4.1 | Tex 143 | Den 1,286 | Chunky knit winter scarf |
Nm 14 |
Ne 8.3 | Tex 71 | Den 643 | Medium-weight knit scarf |
Nm 30 |
Ne 17.7 | Tex 33 | Den 300 | Fine knit scarf |
Nm 48 |
Ne 28.4 | Tex 21 | Den 188 | Fine woven scarf |
Nm 60 |
Ne 35.4 | Tex 17 | Den 150 | Light woven / silk-weight scarf |
| — | — | Tex 8.3 | 75D filament |
Polyester woven scarf (standard) |
| — | — | Tex 16.7 | 150D filament |
Polyester jacquard / heavier woven |
| Count System | Primary Fiber | Primary Market | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nm (Metric Number) | Wool, cashmere, blends | Europe, Asia | ISO standard; most universal for knitted scarves; preferred system for purchase orders |
| Ne (English Cotton Count) | Cotton, cotton blends | USA, UK | Still dominant for cotton spinning; always convert to Nm when working with Asian suppliers |
| Tex | All fibers | Technical / ISO spec | Preferred in test reports, ISO standards, and Uster evenness reports |
| Denier | Polyester, nylon, silk filament | All markets | Standard for all filament yarn specs; never used for spun (staple) yarns |
Common Misconceptions
Yarn Count Myths vs. Facts
Misreadings of yarn count systems in purchase orders, ply notation errors, and conflation of count with quality are among the most frequent causes of scarf specification failures.
"A higher yarn count always means better quality."
Yarn count describes fineness only — not quality. A fine yarn (high Nm) can be poorly spun, high in unevenness, or weak. Quality is determined by CV% (count variation), tenacity, and evenness — not count number alone.
"Nm 30 and Ne 30 are the same yarn count."
Nm 30 (30 metres per gram) ≠ Ne 30 (30 × 840 yards per pound). Nm 30 converts to approximately Ne 17.7. Using the wrong system in a purchase order without clarification is a common cause of wrong yarn weight being delivered.
"Denier is only used for synthetic fibers."
Denier was historically developed for silk — the original filament yarn. It remains the standard for silk filament, polyester filament, and nylon filament scarves globally. It is not used for spun (staple) yarns, where Nm or Ne is appropriate.
"Ply number always halves the yarn count."
For 2-ply, the resultant count is the single count divided by 2 (Nm 2/30 = Nm 15). But 3-ply divides by 3, and non-standard plying configurations exist. Always check the resultant count, not just the ply count, when comparing supplier specifications.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yarn Count System — Buyer FAQ
What yarn count is typical for a winter knit scarf?
Winter knit scarves typically use Nm 2/14 to Nm 2/28 (resultant Nm 7–14) in acrylic or wool yarns — producing fabric weights of 200–400 gsm. Finer knit fashion scarves may use Nm 2/48 to Nm 2/60 (resultant Nm 24–30) for lighter-weight constructions.
How do I convert Ne to Nm?
Multiply the Ne count by 1.693 to get Nm. Example: Ne 20 × 1.693 = Nm 33.9. To convert Nm to Ne, divide by 1.693. This conversion is exact and consistent for all fiber types.
What does "75D/36f" mean on a polyester scarf spec?
75D/36f means 75 denier total, consisting of 36 individual filaments. Each filament is 75/36 = 2.08 denier. More filaments at the same denier = finer individual filaments = softer, silkier hand feel. 75D/72f would be even softer than 75D/36f at the same total denier.
Should I specify Nm or Tex in my purchase order?
For wool, cashmere, and blend knit scarves, use Nm — it is the universal industry standard in Asia and Europe. For polyester and nylon woven scarves, use Denier for filament yarns. For technical testing documentation, Tex is the ISO-preferred system. Always state the system explicitly and never assume the supplier uses the same convention.
What is count variation (CV%) and why does it matter?
Count variation (CV%) measures the evenness of yarn thickness along its length. Higher CV% means uneven yarn, which causes fabric barré (streaks), uneven dyeing, and weak points. Premium scarf yarns should have CV% <2.5% measured by Uster evenness tester. Request Uster test data from suppliers for high-specification programs.
Related Technical Guides
Continue Reading
Standards & References
- ISO 1144:2016 — Textiles: Universal system for designating linear density (Tex System). Defines Tex as the SI-based standard for expressing yarn count.
- ISO 7211-5 — Woven fabrics: Determination of linear density of yarn removed from fabric. Standard method for measuring yarn count in woven scarf constructions.
- ASTM D1907 — Standard Test Method for Linear Density of Yarn by the Skein Method. US method for measuring yarn count including Ne.
- Uster Technologies — Yarn Quality Reference Guide. Industry reference for CV%, Uster evenness testing, and quality benchmarks by yarn type and count.
- Textile Institute Handbook — Yarn Technology. Comprehensive reference for count systems, ply notation, and conversion methodology across all four major systems.