Members KAW Posted December 30, 2008 Members Report Posted December 30, 2008 (edited) There are 2 possiby 3 ways to fix what you have shown in your pictures. When you turn it back at the top as you have, you need to be on the other side of your standing end when coming up when working a guacho interweave on a foundation as you have there. or you need to turn it back at the top differently by coming out at the top under 1, if you do it following the standing end as you have shown in your pics, if you have a Bruce Grant Encyclopedia of braiding look on page 403, fig 1 and you will see what I'm talking about in th first option, if you look on page 437 in just fig 1 and 2 you will see what I'm talking about in the 2nd option. As long as you make and split parallels correctly the knot will come out correct. The parallels in a long guacho interweave are the same as a herringbone, because you are making and splitting parallels with each pass if you see what I'm saying, there are always new parallels with each pass to split until the knot is complete. Hopefully this will help you. KAW If that does'nt work for you there is another opition, let me know if it doesn't work and I with try to explain it Edited December 30, 2008 by KAW Quote
Members entiendo Posted December 30, 2008 Author Members Report Posted December 30, 2008 (edited) OK, I have to read what you posted several times, but I only have Grants, "How to Make Cowboy Gear". Thanks KAW So can I follow the standing standing string on the other side. I read in Gail's book that you need to cross over the standing end at each pass and keep it to the right or below the working end, when going right and keep it to the left, or below the working end, when going left. Course this all depends how my own brain sees the button. The gal that taught me to braid looked at the button completely different than I did and it took us a while to communicate. Edited December 30, 2008 by entiendo Quote
Members KAW Posted December 31, 2008 Members Report Posted December 31, 2008 You can make the knot following the standing end on either side, just one turns back differently, it can be difficult to expain or comprehend on the computer or phone some times when people see things differently, its a hell of alot easier to learn or explain some thing face to face, the main thing with making most knots is to create the doubles and then split them, as long as you do that the knots will turn out, the more of them you do the easier they will get. I used to have that book but it fell apart so I don't know if the diagrams are in that book and I dont have Gail Houghts books so I can't help you there. Hope you get it figured out, KAW Quote
Members entiendo Posted December 31, 2008 Author Members Report Posted December 31, 2008 (edited) Thanks. Someone sent me a grid. I don't know how to use it yet but I have a fealing once I figure it out I'm on my way. Edited December 31, 2008 by entiendo Quote
Members KnotHead Posted February 1, 2009 Members Report Posted February 1, 2009 I know that this is probably a little late on this subject. I hope that you can bare with me on this also. When I make these types of knots especially this one being a very wide knot, I will usually do the interweave in sections using three different thongs. This kind of helps keep it all in order for me anyway. Quote Best Regards, Brian Kidd
Members entiendo Posted February 5, 2009 Author Members Report Posted February 5, 2009 Are thongs strings? And I recently found out that the gaucho interweave has a sort of "glitch" in it when interweaving a Turks head with full turns. So I wasn't doing it wrong after all. I was just unaware that my way of doing a gaucho leaves parallels where it crosses. Go figure. Quote
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