How To Design Celtic Knotwork By Hand

A couple years ago I decided to try designing my own Celtic knotwork. After some internet searching I found a website that explained with step by step instructions how one can design knotwork by hand as well as how to use knotwork fonts to create different designs. At the time I didn’t have the money to buy a knotwork font, plus I didn’t want my knotwork to look as perfect as it would using a computer program to produce it. My intent was to transfer my designs onto wood and then paint them, and I wanted it to really look hand crafted. So I chose the hard way and learned to design knotwork by hand.

A while back I went searching for the website where I’d learned this new skill and was unable to find it. That got me thinking- what if someone else wants to learn to do this and the other "how to" sites out there don’t work for them like they didn’t work for me? So, I’ve decided to put up a "how to" of my own, including some of the shortcuts I’ve found and examples of ways you can play with the basics to make more than just square and rectangular knots.

But we’ll start with the basics. You will need graph paper, a pencil, and tracing paper. Once you have these things, here’s what you do:

First you take graph paper and lightly draw diamonds inside the squares that are already on the paper. You can draw them each inside individual squares if you want a small, tight design or you can draw diagonal lines in four separate squares to make larger diamonds which will produce larger, looser knots.

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This is pretty easy to do for smaller designs, but can be a pain in the ass for bigger knots. Which is why I’ve used Microsoft Paint to make my own graph paper with the diamonds already printed in.

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Creating the Paint file is also a pain in the ass, but you only have to do it once (or, until you get it right anyway) and then you can print as many pages as you want.

After you’ve got your diamonds, either drawn by hand or with the help of a computer, connect the points of the diamonds along the outside of the area of your knot.

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Now comes the design part. You choose places inside the pattern of diamonds for there to be breaks. Breaks are added either vertically or horizontally between diamonds. The breaks ARE the knotwork. They’re the spots where the lines bend and loop, and if you choose bad breakpoints you’ll get a crappy knot. But it’s not hard to figure out through a little trial and error what will work and what won’t.

At this point, for the sake of showing variety, I’m going to add different breaks to each of the designs. By the end, the small design should look obviously different from the bigger design.

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When your breaks have been added, take a pen or a marker or just bear down harder on your pencil and trace around all the lines of the diamonds, curving away from the breaks and picking the pattern back up at the next straight diagonal.

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Once you have your design outlined, you need to flesh it out. In the instructions I used originally, this involved a bunch of erasing of the earlier, underlying lines. That didn’t work well for me though, so I incorporated tracing paper. Lay the tracing paper over your outline. It can be helpful to tape the tracing paper in place, but not always necessary. Then draw an outline of the design, following the lines along the outside of the design area. Do the same for the inside of each internal shape.

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When you’re finished, you should have the fully formed shape of the design.

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Now all you have to do is add the over/under markings. Choose a place to start on your design and connect a "string". Then follow that string throughout the design, alternately connecting the string you’re following and then connecting the next cross string so that it looks as though the string you’re following is weaving over and under the other strings.

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When you’ve connected all the strings in their over/under pattern, your knotwork is done.

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After you’ve got the basics down, you can experiment with different shapes.

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Fork and Cork Wine Festival

This weekend was the second annual Fork and Cork wine festival in scenic Blacksburg, Virginia.

Grass Splattered Sign 

The Keeper was still attending college at Virginia Tech last year when the first Fork and Cork was held and he enjoyed the event quite a bit. So, early last week when we realized that it was coming up again we made some last minute travel plans.

We arrived Friday evening and settled into our hotel room for some rest before the next day’s boozing. Saturday we got up, got ready and ventured out to catch up with some friends who still attend Tech before making our way over to the festival. The weather report was calling for a 20% chance of thunderstorms, but upon setting foot outside we decided that we would probably welcome a little rain during the event. It was hot… like whoa. Sunny, barely any cloud cover and stifling humidity. But we had already purchased our tickets online, so we couldn’t back out and just stay by the pool at the hotel all day.

The Fork and Cork, being only in it’s second year, is not a very big event. There were only 20 wineries present, a handful of food vendors and about 6-10 arts and crafts booths. The event’s size wasn’t a problem though. The event was set up so people only needed tickets for the wine booths, which were in a separate fenced off area along with a couple of wine related vendors and the radio station sponsoring the event.

Oak Barrel Vendor

The venue’s size, on the other hand, was in my opinion a little too small. The winery tents were all tiny, I’m assuming because of the size of the venue, which meant there was less space for people to stand and participate in tastings. Because of that, all of the wineries had ridiculously huge crowds clamoring around to taste their wines.

Crowds 

Despite the cramped conditions, sweltering heat exacerbated by the asphalt parking lot we were walking around on and the lack of readily available, easily accessible, COLD water to stave off dehydration and heat stroke though, The Keeper and I did manage to enjoy ourselves a little bit.

We tasted a few wines.
Wine Pouring
Wine Tasting

We browsed some of the merchandise.
Handicrafts
Glass Caddies    Hokie  

We bought some extremely tasty sangria.
Sangria

And we got to say hi to our favorite local celebrity, The Plaid Avenger. He even did a dashing super-spy pose for me when he noticed the camera, but I managed to hit the shutter button right before he posed and missed it. Now I’m kicking myself for not asking him to pose again… ah well. He’s still a sexy plaid man-beast.
Plaid Man

The Mundane

Two more days and no more job. I’m part of a layoff and Friday is my last day. I’ve known about it for a while (since, like, May of last year), but it’s a little strange for the day to finally almost be here. I’m not quite sure what I’m going to do. Since I was notified about the layoff I’ve been sending resume’s out all over the place, but I’ve had no luck and to be honest I’m not terribly thrilled by the idea of another cube monkey job. I mean, if I can get something that pays well and requires so little effort that I’m able to get online and bullshit around all day like at this place, yea ok I wouldn’t mind that. I just don’t have much hope that will happen. Most other companies have far tighter controls on what people can and can’t do online at work, I just kinda lucked out here.

I could try to do something completely different, but I’m not sure what I’d do. I have a friend (back in the area where I grew up, not where I live now) who took a cake baking or decorating class or something and now has a business where she spends very little time and money making specialty cakes and selling them for ridiculously huge profits. I think that’s something I might be able to do, but I’m not sure. OEN has started her own greeting card business since she got laid off. I have no interest in that, but I’m wondering if there’s anything similar I could maybe do? There are some craft things that I’m fairly certain I could sell, but they take so long and so much effort to make that I’m not sure I could actually profit from them. I’ve begun thinking about basically setting something up so people pay me for general life advice, but I’m not sure I have the credentials for that. I don’t even know what the credentials for that would be, I just know that I give really good advice a lot of the time. I have a little time before the money runs out though, and if I come up with something really, truly kick ass I can lean on The Keeper a little I’m sure. Technically he could probably support both of us on his own, but I don’t want him to have to.

In other news, I think I may start using Google Buzz. If you have a Google account and want to follow me, my Gmail address is over there on the Contact a Platypus page *points at the sidebar*. If you do not have a Google account and you want to follow me, I’ve added a link over on the sidebar under the Other Blogs You Should Read category for my Buzz profile. I realize it’s not a blog, but I didn’t feel like adding a new category for just one link. Maybe I’ll add links for other people’s Buzzes or Twitters I like and then add a category. We’ll see.

I had been considering Twitter, even though I kind of had a bit of a hate-on for it, because a lot of the bloggers and webcomic artists I follow have Twitter and it is kind of cool to go to their page periodically and read through their updates. Especially OEN. But Buzz seems to be similar and is connected with the email and docs I use for this blog, so I think I’ll just use it, at least for now.

Gifts and Crafts

The gift giving part of the holiday season has passed and this year it was worse than normal. I don’t mean that I got bad gifts. I actually only got one that I doubt I’ll really get any use out of, or at least not the intended use. No, the problem with gifts this year was not the receiving but the giving.

See, every year I end up deciding that someone is going to get something handmade. Usually I end up deciding that multiple someones are going to get something handmade. This wouldn’t really be a problem, but I’m usually overly ambitious about what I can do in the time I’ve given myself. Last year I decided to hand paint Celtic knot work onto four baskets to be filled with homemade holiday goodies and given to a friend of mine and various family members of The Keeper. I decided this in November, and having never designed Celtic knot work before in my life. So call it about six weeks to learn how to design the knot work, design it, transfer it to the baskets and paint all the baskets. Oh and then cook/bake a bunch of stuff to fill these baskets with right before they’re going to be given out to people. Yeeaaaa…. I got it all done last year, but it came down to the wire. And that’s not even counting the scarf I made for The Keeper’s sister, though I decided to do that far enough in advance that it wasn’t really a problem.

Well, this year I decided that my Dad and Granny were going to get handmade gifts. I decided this earlier than I had with the baskets (I think), but I procrastinated on actually starting the work on them. And then there were some unforeseen occurrences that took my focus away from my gift projects and then it was Christmas and only one of the items was finished. I downscaled my ambition this year, having remembered the hell that was rushing to get everything done last year, and I had failed.

Well, I have come up with a plan to keep this from happening again. I’ve decided to work on any handmade gifts I intend to give people throughout the coming year instead of during the last month or so before the holiday. I’ll probably start working on the gifts sometime next week. Since I do not intend to give anyone in my family the link to this blog and since I doubt most of them are likely to find me on their own, I intend to post pictures of my progress and explanations of what I’m doing. It really should have occurred to me before, but perhaps I need a crafty platypus for those posts… and there may or may not be other platypi that will need to be birthed for other reasons…