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Indoor and Outdoor Recreations for Girls

Chapter 8 HOW TO WEAVE A SPLINT BASKET

Word Count: 1368    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

is delightful to work with, almost as soft and pliable as ribbon, while having more substance. Although there is apparently such d

diameter and three inches in height i

r Roll o

es. Have ready a clean lap-board, a pair of large scissors, and an old towel. The l

es of basket wi

tempt to tear the splint, for it will not tear evenly. From the other piece of splint cut four strips for weavers, making the first one-half of an inch wide, the next one-fourth of

he first f

p the

ight spoke

ch end of every spoke; see diagram (Fig. 85). Lay the spokes in front of you on the lap-board crossing the first four at the centre (Fig. 85). Place the nex

. 3 and No. 6, and so on around the circle (Fig. 87). Be sure the lower end of a spoke fits between the same numbers as the upper end. Wh

basket c

for weavi

s of trimming on differen

the b

We

of the spok

, under, until it has crossed spoke No. 16; then skip No. 1, bring the weaver under No. 9, and weave another row. You will find it necessary to skip one spoke at the beginning of each row, in order to make a continuous under-and-over weave. Weave five rows with the eighth-inch weaver, then sli

alf-inch weaver inside the basket, close to the bottom, and weave under and over until the row is complete; then, allowing for a lap of about three inches, cut the weaver off and slide the end under the first end of the weaver, making the invisible joint

Bend the

din

until pliable. Bend each spoke down snugly over the top weaver, and slip the end through the next weaver, pushing it down until its end is hidden

.-Bindi

nd cut two pieces of the fourth-inch weaver which will go around the basket and lap about an inch. Place one piece along the inside edge, the other along the outside edge of the basket, and with the sixteenth-inc

Putting o

Trim

a spoke at the top of the basket (letter A, Diagram 91), give a twist to the left, and pass it beneath the next spoke, as shown in Diagram 91, letter B. Pull the loop down and flatten it a little with your thumb, then twist the weaver again, this time to t

Making th

rows of trimming, and between them is run a weaver

rapped with the eighth-inch weaver, and fastened to the basket with loops of the same. The weaving of this large basket differs from the smaller one, in that the weaver is not cut at the end of each row, but is continued around row after row. F

ves variety and adds interest to the work, and the splints will take dye readily.

twenty-five yards, and a roll will make several medium-sized baskets

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