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21st March 06, 08:55 AM
#1
Fringing a fly plaid
Hi folks!
A couple people have asked how to make the kind of purled fringe on the edge of a fly plaid like the one shown on the following site:
http://www.lindaclifford.com/FlyPlaid.html
I asked my mom, who knows everything, and here's what she said. Thought I'd share it with you folks in case you wanted to make your own:
Start by pulling threads out of the edge of the tartan until you have maybe 3-4" of fringe all the way around. You can experiment with the length you want - the twisted and tied fringe will be shorter than it is when it's not yet tied. Just remember that you can't put the threads back, but you _can_ take more out!!.
Select 4-8 warp ends (depending on the weight of the yarn) For the kilt fabric, I think that 6 would be about right. Anyway try 6 and see how it works. Divide the six into 2 equal groups. Twist one group of 3 to the right until it kinks. Holding on to the end of that, twist the other three to the right until it kinks. Hold both together at the tip and twist them to the left until the whole group of 6 kinks. Tie a tight overhand knot in the end. It is easiest if you use some kind of "board" that you can stick pins into. Stick the pin into the fabric and into the board at the point where the fabric ends and where the fringe begins. That gives you something to brace the fringe against while you are doing the twisting.
Cheers,
Barb
Last edited by Barb T; 21st March 06 at 09:06 AM.
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21st March 06, 10:45 AM
#2
Kelly's been SEARCHING AND SEARCHING for an instruction on that. Thanks Barb!
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21st March 06, 10:59 AM
#3
No prob - my mom hand weaves early American coverlets and has used various knotted fringes for the edges. I figured she'd know!
Barb
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21st March 06, 11:13 AM
#4
Great article, I'll try this when I find time. THANKS.
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21st March 06, 01:17 PM
#5
Oh, my...!
[Happy face] At first I thought casual and traditional kiltmaking was arduous and time consuming.
[Cool with that] Then sporran making was added.
[Smiles] Kilt pins had to be searched out.
[Fun] Dying leather belts black and brown followed.
[Confused] The right shoes, the right socks and hose.
[Look sharp] Swords and dirks and knives...
[Penny-pinching] Re-tailoring tweed jackets kept me busy for a while.
[New ideas] Throw in tartan scarves with tied fringes, tartan santa hats with rabbit fur accents, tartan diaper bags for new grandchildren arriving.
Now purled fringes! Will the accessorizing never end!?
Last edited by way2fractious; 21st March 06 at 03:27 PM.
Reason: oh, yeah... add blades!
"Listen Men.... You are no longer bound down to the unmanly dress of the Lowlander." 1782 Repeal.
* * * * *
Lady From Hell vs Neighbor From Hell @ [url]http://way2noisy.blogspot.com[/url]
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21st March 06, 04:13 PM
#6
It is a sore trial, isn't it?
Barb
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27th March 07, 11:13 PM
#7
 Originally Posted by Barb T.
Hi folks!
A couple people have asked how to make the kind of purled fringe on the edge of a fly plaid like the one shown on the following site:
http://www.lindaclifford.com/FlyPlaid.html
Select 4-8 warp ends (depending on the weight of the yarn) For the kilt fabric, I think that 6 would be about right. Anyway try 6 and see how it works. Divide the six into 2 equal groups. Twist one group of 3 to the right until it kinks. Holding on to the end of that, twist the other three to the right until it kinks. Hold both together at the tip and twist them to the left until the whole group of 6 kinks. Tie a tight overhand knot in the end...
Do you mean an overhand knot or a square knot?
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28th March 07, 05:21 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by gilmore
Do you mean an overhand knot or a square knot?
Just make a loop in the end and pull the bunch of raw ends through. Just once. Like you were putting a knot in the end of a shoe lace because the plastic thingy had fallen off.
B
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28th March 07, 08:41 AM
#9
Thanks for that link Gilmore, seeing the finished article answers my questions.
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28th March 07, 06:10 PM
#10
I think she means overhand knot for you boy scouts.
Last edited by neo71665; 28th March 07 at 09:32 PM.
Reason: fixing pic
Knowlege is knowing that a tomato is a fruit; Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad
 Originally Posted by Dreadbelly
If people don't like it they can go sit on a thistle.
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