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This was a requested pattern from one of the TalkTemari
member's photo albums - Sara very willingly shared her notes to make
it, although fully admits that "this is all very experimental :>) "
- but it worked! For anyone that is a string-art, spirograph or the
like it's a hands-down winner - or for anyone else too. And - as
Sara says, "You are gonna need A LOT of pins. :>) " It's a S4 divide with obi on a "not small" mari. Mine was probably 4" diameter maybe a bit smaller. I would imagine it would get kind of cluttered looking on a mari that was too small. NOTE that your marking thread will not be seen - so don't use anything fancy (like I did.) |
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When dividing the ball keep all
your pins in at all the guide line
crossings. Once the ball is divided you will see 8 triangles (the
points highlighted by the pins.) You will work one triangle at a
time. On each leg of the triangle you are working on, divide it
into 8
even sections (you'll be adding 7 pins between the two existing
pins.
I measured the middle pin and eyeballed the other three. The
photos
show some pin markings. Once your triangle is marked on all sides with pins, pick a starting point, any starting point. Bring your needle up behind the marking pin making sure you are also on the outside of the marking thread. Then count over 11 pins counter-clockwise. On the 11th pin, pick up some thread on the right side of the pin (include the marking thread) come around the pin (over the marking thread) and count over another 11 pins and repeat. When looking at the photo at the left, you can see the most of this. Also notice that it's going to look pretty random until you finish all the lines. Go to an adjacent triangle and mark the other two side with pins and repeat. Make sure that you catch the loop of the finished triangle side with your stitches. |
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I grabbed very little thread (of
the mari base) while doing the stitches on this ball and relied on the
actual stitches themselvesto keep each of the others in place.
You can see what I mean
in picture at left. The pins did get in the way and I would
remove them
when I finished two adjacent sides. Also, I added the yellow stitches as an afterthought after all the pins were removed. I didn't re-add pins, I just used the existing loops. I did the yellow the same way only counting over 5 pins and not doing the stitches that would follow the marking thread (you'll see what I mean when you get to that point.) Then you'll just do a wrap design along the marking threads. Note that along the marking threads with all your loopy stitching, it will be bulky along there. I used a gold Kreinik ribbon (sp?) gold to kind of PUSH the bulk down. |
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