Braid a Bracelet

Braid a Bracelet

Somebody wanted to know recently in the German blog how to braid a square bracelet.
I found out, that you can use all three techniques (braiding, Kumihimo, fingerloop):

 


- Picture left: Braid: 8-strand square braid
- Picture center: Kumihimo: Kumihimo tutorial – square braid – firkantfletting
- Picture right: fingerloop: Tutorial: START HERE! 5-loop braids

Here at unikatissima:
2 Techniques – 1 Cord

Kumihimo Pattern Planner

Lytha Studios Kumihimo Pattern Planner

Recently I looked again for pattern generators, after all I made some myself (see links below ;-)) and I want to know what great ideas other people have ;-)

One of these great ideas ist the Kumihimo pattern planner.
You can get with it the initial position of the threads for a simple 8-braid for a given pattern.
They didn’t explain what a ‘simple 8-braid’ is but I think that it is the same as in my Kumihimo entry, I didn’t have the time to check this, yet.


Links:
Lytha Studios KumiPlanner – Kumihimo Pattern Design Application – Beta

Here at unikatissima:
Kumihimo – here you can find also a template for a brainding disk (Marudai) that you can make yourself from cardboard

Entries with the tag ‘Kumihimo’

Maze Pattern Generator
Pattern Generator (Cellular Automaton)
Random Squares Pattern Generator
With this comes the entry ‘What Can You Do With Filet Crochet/Cross Stitch Embroidery Charts?’
crochet medaillon

Woven Silver Wire Ring

craftster Woven Silver Wire Ring

I find this ring most beautiful, it is braid from five strands of two silver wires each and the beads are attached at the ends.
Simply yet striking.
Is seems that it looks also wonderful if braided from copper wire – there was some copper wire laying around here somewhere…
;-)
By the way the braiding with five strands doesn’t seem to be very difficult.


Links:
Woven Silver Wire Ring (Woven Wire Cluster Ring)
How to Make a Braid Using More Than Three Strands (English with very helpful step-by-step photos)

Rhombic Dodecahedron Calendar

hbmeyer Rhombic Dodecahedron Calendar

I find this 12-sided calendar a nice idea for a gift.
It is made for 2009 but you can adapt it to 2010 from the blank template yourself, possibly even handwritten and embellished with funny sketches.

 


Links:
Rhombic Dodecahedron and Calendar 2009: paper strips for plaiting
There is also a German version.

Chevron Takadai Braid

braidweaver Chevron Takadai Braid

Since a long time I take a look at the Takadai braids instructions from time to time – I find them sooo beautiful!
They resemble the Kumihimo braid patterns, but the cords become flat, not round.

But I don’t have any chance to try this because I don’t have the room to place a braiding loom somewhere here.
And I think that I would lose interest very soon.
But anyhow…
;-)


Links:
Instruction for the chevron Takadai braid (Creating Pattern with Texture)
How Taka Dai Braids are Made
Description of the braiding loom (Parts of the Taka Dai)

Here at unikatissima: Entries with the tag ‘Kumihimo’

2 Techniques – 1 Cord

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord

Recently somebody showed me a simple yet beautiful finger loop pattern.
At home I tried it directly again, it is the outer cord (above and below), I braided it first to the left and then to the right.

Then I thought that I worked such a pattern in Kumihimo already, but the one I made worked a little different.
Therefore I transcribed the new finger loop pattern to a Kumihimo pattern (the middle cord on the photo).
The Kumihimo cord became much sturdier because I used quite a heavy weight.

Both are braidung techniques and I reckon that every finger loop pattern can be ‘translated’ to a Kumihimo pattern but surely not the other way round.

Afterwards I did some research and found that ‘my finger loop pattern’ has been described on the pattern page of the Fingerloop Braids Website as ‘A lace bend rounde of 8 bowes — c. 1475’ (viz. it is done with 8 loops in place of 6 loops in my case) – but I never understood the notation ;-))

Here I show you how I made the finger loop cord and the Kumihimo cord, you had perhaps problems with the notation, too ;-)

 

Finger loop cord

Cut 6 threads of the same length and elasticity and lay them in half to form loops.
Make 3 threads per colour (here dark blue and turquoise).
Knot the open sides together and fix them somewhere to be able to braid with the loops (you can find more detailed instructions in the links of my entry about finger loop).

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
Take the loops of one colour on the index, middle finger and ring finger of one hand and those of the other colour on the corresponding fingers of the left hand.
Here I took the turquoise loops on the left and the dark blue loops on the right hand.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
First swap the loops of the right index and the left ring finger.

To do this lay the loop of the right index behind the loop of the left ring finger…

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
…and take then the loop from the left ring finger on the right index.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
You have now on the left hand two turquoise loops (on the index and the middlefinger) and a dark blue loop (on the ring finger) and on the right hand one turquoise loop (on the index) and two dark blue loops (on the middle and the ring finger).

Note: I didn’t take a photo of it, but after every swap open your arms wide to tighten the braid and make it sturdier.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
Next swap the loops of both middle fingers in the same way.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
You have now on the left hand one turquoise and two dark blue loops and on the right hand the other way round.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
For now the last step is the swap of the loops of the right ring finger and the left index.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
Now you have all three turquoise loops on the right hand and the dark blue loops on the left hand.

That’s been the first half of the steps to do.
Repeat all steps (index right-ring finger left-swap, middle finger-swap, ring finger right-index left-swap) to bring back the turquoise loops to the left hand and the dark blue loops to the right hand, then you have braid a full round.

Repeat the steps until your cord is of desired length.

 

Kumihimo cord

Cut here too threads of the same length and elasticity, but this time cut 6 threads of one colour (here turquoise) and 6 in another (here dark blue).
I made the cord on my cardboard marudai, but it was no fun at all because you have to re-lay the threads for this pattern to their appropriate places at every braid.
At least by now is the moment to ‘construct’ a marudai (links to self-made marudai in my Kumihimo entry).

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
Sort your threads as shown in the graphic.
Lay the upper dark blue thread pair between the threads of the lower turquoise thread pair and then lay both turquoise threads where the dark blue ones have been.
Push together the thread pairs to clearly separate them from each other.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
In the second step you do the same with the dark blue thread pair top left and the turquoise thread pair down right.
Here again push together the thread pairs neatly.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
In the third step you do the same with the dark blue thread pair down left and the turquoise thread pair top right.

That was the first half of the steps and here, too, the steps must be repeated to get back to the original colour distribution:

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
Lay the upper turquoise thread pair between the threads of the lower dark blue thread pair and then lay both dark blue threads where the turquoise ones have been.
Always push together the thread pairs neatly.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
In the fifth step do the same with the turquoise thread pair top left and the dark blue thread pair down right.
Here again push together the thread pairs neatly.

 

unikatissima Fingerloop Kumihimo Cord
In the last step of this round you do the same with the turquoise thread pair down left and the dark blue thread pair top right.
As always push together the thread pairs neatly.

You have finished the first round now, repeat all six steps until your cord has the desired length.

Have fun with the comparison of the two techniques finger loop and Kumihimo and make some beautiful cords :)


Links:
Marca brandenburgensis anno domini 1260 – that’s where the woman came from who showed me the pattern

Fingerloop Braids Website: Fingerloop Braid Patterns
and there:
the finger loop pattern that I presented here, but with 8 loops (‘A lace bend rounde of 8 bowes — c. 1475’)

Here at unikatissima:
Finger loop
for more detailed instructions see there the links

Kumihimo
   for the construction of a self-made marudai see there the links
   my template for a cardboard marudai

On this page:
Instruction for finger loop cord
Instruction for Kumihimo cord