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Indoor and Outdoor Recreations for Girls

Chapter 5 PRIMITIVE REED CURTAINS

Word Count: 1084    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

eds have been carefully dried at home, is a pleasing soft gray green, with suggestions here and there of gray browns, reds, and yellows.

ew cents for cord, staple-tacks or nails, and screw-eyes, but, like the

Mate

tails may not be bent or split, for as reeds in your curtain they must be as near perfect as possible. Cut the velvety brown head off from each one, making al

nning a primi

e of twine tie

r (Fig. 49). Detail of the work is given in Fig. 50. Place a cat-tail reed up against the four ties, allowing one string from each tie to come over and the other under the cat-tail (Fig. 51). Cross the two lengths of each cord over the last cat-tail, bringing the lower string up and the upper string down (Fig. 52); then lay another reed up against the crossed stri

g to come over and the o

s the two len

cat-tail up against

te large and sma

curtain of reeds

e nail in top

ned on top pole for

Crossin

drive in a staple-nail (Fig. 49, B, B), shown more plainly in Fig. 56. These staple-nails are for holding in place the long cord used in rolling up the curtain (Fig. 57, B, B, and Fig. 58, B, B). Thread one end of a long piece of cord from the back of the curtain through one staple-nail and the other end through the other staple-nail. Bring both ends of the cord down over the front of the curtain around the bottom and up over the back; then tie the ends on the pole (Fig. 57, C, C). Dotted lines show how the cord runs along the back of the

n-Bee

nd gay laughter, so that ever after the curtains would be filled with delightful associations of the charming summer afternoon. Reed curtains can be fashioned in any width. If

curtain raised b

all end of

arge end o

in, each reed of tw

ay-Sc

out two inches of pith from the large end of one cat-tail very cautiously to avoid breaking the sides; then push the small end of another cat-tail into the opening (Figs. 59, 60, 61); weave these long pieces together as you wove the single reeds in the first curtain, using extra lines of weave. If you cannot obtain cat-tails, take other reed

in the

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