Temari Pattern 99EB01
 
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"The Fish Temari"... one of the TT members,
Janny (from The Netherlands) showed her photos of her temari and so
inspired another member, Sue C to call one of her color choices and
patterns "The Fish Temari" - since if chosen appropriately an image of
a fish (or fish sekelton) skeleton pops out at you when you look at it.
This is actually a specific variation of another general pattern but,
it became so popular among the TT group that it warrants its own
description here. Elsie B. and Sue C. collaborated on this write up.
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From Elsie: I used a 3" mari. Experiment with other
sizes if you wish (webmaster's note - if you go much beyond a 3" mari,
you probably have to think about increasing the number of the vertical
divide since close spacing is part of what makes this illusion
work). Wrap with white or another light color. This will
show, and
becomes part of the fish. Choose two stitching threads--one color the
exact same shade as the
thread wrap (this will become the rest of the fish) and one dark color
for contrast to set off the fish motif. The marking is a Simple 8
marking with an obi, using the perle cotton
that's the same color as the mari.
ARRANGEMENT OF THE KIKU:
Around the North Pole you will be stitching a kiku on four of the
threads (every other thread of the eight) with the dark color.
Also around the North Pole you will be stitching a kiku on the other
four threads with the light color.
Do the same on the South Pole side of the mari, but if a marking thread
has the dark color stitched on it at the NP, it will have white
stitched on it at the SP. If there is white on a thread at the
NP, stitch the dark color on that thread at the SP. Begin the dark kiku
as close to the poles as possible. Begin the
white/light kiku about a centimeter from the poles. When stitching the
points toward the obi, stitch them on the side of
the obi away from the original pole. For example, if the kiku is
at the NP, the stitches at the obi are taken on the SP side of the obi,
and vice versa. This allows the points to interweave with the
kiku at the other pole and form the fish's tail fins. The first
round is just "over the border" of the obi, and the subsequent rounds
stretch toward the opposite pole.
STITCHING ORDER (Finally! You thought I'd never get to it, didn't
you???)
NP - go around once with the dark color
SP - go around once with the dark color
NP - go around once with the white/light color
SP - go around once with the white/light color.
Here's a super hint from Susan:
"If you start with your color at the equator, rather than the pole,
then when you've gone all around the top, you can just slide under the
equator a little bit to the next MT (marking thread) and do the color
around the bottom side (one less time to stop and start.)." Is
that not a cool hint? That means you don't have to have four
threads going at once! Keep stitching until the fish looks like it's a
good size for your
temari and the fins all look like they're the right size for your
fish. When it looks OK to you, stitch a couple more rounds with
the dark color so the fish really stands out and is framed by the dark
thread. When it was all done, I did the official Hayashi (is that
correct???)
'nudge and fudge' step with the tail fins. You can leave them so
it looks like they are straight across (parallel to the obi), or
play with them so they form a 'V' shape. The one in my TT file
have v-shaped tail fins. Just use a blunt needle to move the
threads about and see what you come up with.
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Last updated 2/2005 © From 1998 inclusive
G.Thompson, Elsie Bartlett and Sue Cameron