Creating Atlantian Medallion Cords Using
Kumihimo on a Disk
Mistress Ealdthryth of Humberstone, OP (mka Christine
Grewcock)
The Atlantian
medallion cord project was requested by TRM Sinclair and Kari, who want braided
cords for the award medallions given out during Their reign. To assure
consistency, TRM have selected an 8-strand spiral braid using DMC size 5 pearl
cotton thread in these colors: 725 (gold), 796 (blue), and B5200 (white). You
can also use 6-strand #25 embroidery floss, although I find it harder to work
with.
The directions below are for kumihimo. You can get the same result using the fingerloop braiding instructions for "a lace bend rounde of eight bowes" (http://fingerloop.org/patterns.html#n08) and replacing the fourth white bow with a gold one.
Setup
The kit contains a foam disk with 32 slots cut evenly around the edge, one strand of gold thread, 3 strands of white thread, a skein of blue thread, and 8 small cards with slots. The cut strands are about 6 feet long. Each strand of thread is about 6 feet long, which will result in a cord about 3 feet long and 1/8” diameter. To warp an empty disk, measure 4 blue strands the same length as the gold and white. It is best to just fold the blue back and forth, then cut the loop at one end, leaving two loops at the other. Tie all 8 strands together with the knot at the looped end. The loop allows you to hand a counterweight. Place the knotted end through the hole in the center of the disk and hold it on the underside with one hand. With the other hand place the strands in the slots according to the pattern. You can warp the disk on either the blank side or the numbered side. The starting position for each strand as indicated below:
G
W
B W
B W
B
B
G is Gold, W is
white, and B is blue. Each pair of
strands will be opposite another pair on the disk, so you have 2 X patterns.
Make sure the strands are taut on the surface of the disk, but not so tight
that they bend the disk. Attach a counterweight to the loop underneath if you
want one.
Braiding
Hold the disk
flat in front of you at about sternum height with the G-W pair of strands
farthest away from your body. You will work with the strands of one X at a time
by moving them into slots on the disk. These instructions will refer to the
strands closest to you as lower and those opposite as upper.
1) Grasp the strand on the lower left leg of the
X and pull it out of its slot. Move it clockwise around the outside edge of the
disk and place it in the slot to the left of the two strands in the upper side
of the X so that it looks like this:
B G W
B W
B W
B
2) Grasp the upper right strand on the X (which
now looks like a bird foot), pull it out of its slot, move it clockwise around the outside of
the disk, and place it in the slot to the right of the remaining strand on the
bottom of the X. You are back to an X formation but one slot counterclockwise:
B G
B W
B W
B W
3) Turn the disk counterclockwise so that the
pair of strands that were to the left are now closest to your body in the lower
position, so that it looks like this:
W
W
G W
B B
B
B
4) Repeat steps 1, 2 and 3 until your braid is
the desired length or you come to the point where there is hardly any strand to
place in the slots and you cannot go any further. Carefully take the braid off the disk.
To finish it you can either knot the loose ends together or wrap strand around
the edges tightly and cut the strands off even at the bottom to give it a
tassel-like appearance.
Tips
·
If you need to set
the disk aside, make sure you stop with three strands together (as after Step 1
above). That way when you pick it back up, you know that the side with one
strand goes closest to your body.
·
If you are unsure
which strand you moved most recently, check the pattern over the hole in the
center of the disk. The strand lying on top of the others is the one you moved
most recently.
·
When you cut your
strands to warp the disk, if you have more than one strand of the same color,
measure double the length and fold it, leaving the loop at the end you tie to
go through the center hole.
·
For long strands
it helps keep it untangled if you wind most of the thread onto a yarn bob or
spool, which will hang from the edge of your disk.
·
You can attach a
small weighted spool or other object to the tied end of the strands below the
center hole to act as a counterweight and keep the strands from sliding when
you pull them taut. A small wooden spool or even a set of keys makes a good
counterweight.
·
The heavier the
counterweight, the more flexible the braid.
·
When creating a
spiral braid, you can turn the disk clockwise instead of counterclockwise. Just
make sure that you keep turning the same direction once you start going in one
direction.
If you have any
questions, please contact me at ealdthryth@yahoo.com
and I’ll try to help.
If you want to
know more about kumihimo, please read my handout for the “Kumihimo on a
Disk” class.
Most importantly,
have fun creating beautiful braids!