Temari Pattern 99HB02
Intermediate to Advanced - Pattern contributed by Helen Bigelow /
Download PDF file
of this pattern
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This is another temari made by Helen B that the discussion
group
asked her to share the workings for... Helen originally worked it from
a
Japanese book but shares her interpretation here which gives a little
more
in detail description on how to achieve the woven effect that everyone
fell
in love with. Thanks for sharing Helen!
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This ball was inspired by a picture in a Japanese book,
ISBN4-8377-0185-x,
page 12 & 13, balls 4 & 5, diagrammed on page 63. Very
easy!
This is a wrapped and woven pattern, and the ball in my picture is about 28 cm. in
circumference.
I will give directions for my exact placement of colors, numbers of
rows,
etc. which differ completely from the picture in the Japanese
book.
The weave and the colors can be varied infinitely. In my ball,
the
threads are placed very tightly and closely together.
Divide the ball into fourths, with
pins
at the North Pole, the South Pole, and along the equator at East and
West.
Place additional pins midway between East and West. (I use a
green
pin for West and a yellow pin
for
East, which helps me know where I am. Yellow for East because of the sunrise; green for West
because
green means go and because of "Go West young man." Blue pin for
North
Pole, red for South. I used a gold marker thread both to mark and
for accent in the weave. Place marker thread from North Pole to
South
Pole, crossing the equator. Place another marker thread around
the equator. Now place another marker thread around the ball,
starting
at the equator midway between East and West. Your ball will have
4
triangles above the equator and 4 below. With the North Pole
facing
up, enter another marker thread to start on the equator at the West, or
green, pin, and run it in a shallow curve toward the East pin.
The
highest point of the curve is 2 cm. up from the equator at the midway
marker
thread. Curve back down to the East pin, reverse the ball, and
mark
it from East to West on the southern hemisphere. Place marker
thread
similarly from midpoint to midpoint, in a shallow curve with the
highest
point 2 cm from the equator at the East and West pins. This
sounds
complicated, but isn't. You are marking off the field which will
be
covered with the woven pattern. You will be wrapping the ball in
the
wide areas within those shallow curves.
Now you're ready to wrap. I used a light
blue,
a navy, a soft orange and a yellow. The navy is used within the
wrap,
and also after the wrap and on top of it for accent. The mari is
a soft yellow. Starting with the North Pole up, toward the sky, and
with
the West pin facing you, wrap 2 rows of light blue to your right,
completely
around the ball along side the shallow curve marker thread, West to
East,
across the equator, and then down under and back up to the West pin.
Keep
the North Pole up, and wrap 2 rows of light blue on the opposite side
of
the ball, to your left but again going from West to East, then down
under,
then up to West again. Your threads cross over themselves at the
equator.
Keep them tidy and close together. They will be attractively
"bundled"
later. Those are the outsides of the pattern. Now to your right
wrap
a gold marker thread, then to your left.
Similarly, now wrap 12 rows of navy thread around
the
ball to your right, then around the ball to your left. Finish off with
gold
wrapper thread.
Next: 12 rows of orange around the ball to the
right,
then around the ball to the left. Then the gold wrapper thread.
Next: 12 rows of light blue in each direction,
finished
with gold thread.
Next: 12 rows of yellow in each
direction.
This is your center row. I kept my threads very close together
and
things got tight but there was room. Now for the weaving.
NOTE: I used DMC 5, but your
wrapping
threads may be wider or narrower. Or your wrapping may be tighter
or looser than mine. You can alter and adjust to make your
wrapped
spaces fit and hold the same number of threads. But if you do
adjust
the number of wrapped threads, keep the number divisible by 3. In
the woven part that follows, you weave under and over, repeatedly,
always
the same number of threads. So if you've wrapped in batches of
12,
you can weave over 4, under 4, over 4. Batches of 10 would not
work.
Batches of 9 would work: over 3, under 3, over 3. Batches of 15
would
work.
Now the weaving begins. You have been
wrapping
from West to East, starting at the equator. With the North Pole
still
up, move the ball so that you will begin wrapping also starting at the
equator
but now from midpoint to midpoint. The color sequence changes. So does
the
final number of rows. Gold marker threads are used between
colors.
Before you start weaving wrap two rows of light blue in each
direction.
They will lie on top of what you wrapped before, and will act as
border/accent
threads. Finish with gold thread.
Now start weaving. Your first color will be
12
rows wide. Use the eye end of the needle to pass under
threads.
Weave a 4/4/4 basket weave pattern, as follows: weave 4 rows of yellow
over
4 of dark blue, then 4 rows under, then 4 rows over. The next
color
you'll encounter will be orange: weave four under and over making sure
that
as you go along weaving and encountering the different colors you
always
go under/over/under/over, never over/over or under/under.
When
you've made it all the way around then do the next four rows, with your
under/over basket weave maintaining its change of direction.
After
12 rows of yellow, finish with gold.
Next color: light blue, 12 rows wide.
Similarly
weave 4 rows of light blue, keeping the
under/over
sequence correct. Then 4 rows again, then again. Finish
with
gold.
Next: 12 rows of orange.
Now, for some reason I stopped being
symmetrical.
My next 12 rows are navy, woven under/over the same way in groups of 4
each;
then 12 rows of yellow, then 12 rows of light blue. This
completes
the woven part of the ball.
Now outline each far side of your woven areas with
four
rows of navy. Essentially you are wrapping the navy threads over
those
first shallow curves you placed with marker thread. Then I
accented
each division, in each direction, with one wrap of one navy
thread.
The final gold threads show up nicely, making each "square" stand
out. This helps make the quilted look.
To bundle the crossed threads at the equator,
thread
your needle with navy and enter it so that it exits on the equator at
one
side of a crossed mass of threads. Wrap it up around the
mass
neatly, go under it again, up and under again and again carefully
placing
each thread alongside the last until the mass has formed a neat
attractive
bundle. When all four masses are thus bundled, you can (if you
choose)
lay down four more navy threads for your equator, passing under the
bundles.
The ball is done. It takes a while and sounds very complex but
once
you get going it is easy. Good luck.
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Last updated 2/03 © From 1998 inclusive
G.Thompson and Helen Bigelow