1, step one, needle. Prepare the needle and wool, tie the wool in a slipknot, put the needle in, and wrap your right hand around the needle.
2. Repeat winding 36 stitches and make knitting demonstration.
The second step is to weave the edge of the hat. After lifting the needle, start to knit the next needle in circles, 5 ~ 7 times, so that the hem is rolled up.
4. Step 3, start knitting the hat body. First, take the knitting method of upper and lower needles to knit for 4 times.
5. Then change the knitting needle and knit the hat to the required length.
6. Step 4: Weave the top of the hat. At the top of the hat, start to take in stitches, knit two stitches, and then two stitches and one stitch.
7. Just repeat knitting on the stick needle, and there are still ten stitches.
8. Then thread the wire into the coil and tighten it on the reverse side.
9. Then turn it over and tidy it up. Finally, sew on your favorite decoration, and the knitting is completed.
Weaving is one of the oldest handicrafts of mankind. According to the Book of Changes, in the Paleolithic Age, humans woven nets (net bags) from plant bast, filled with stone balls, and threw them out to harm animals.
On the pottery unearthed from Neolithic sites such as Xi 'an Banpo, Miaodigou and Sanliqiao, the word "ten" and the word "human" are printed, which clearly shows that it was trampled by mats, and some found that the residual bamboo pieces of mats adhered to the bottom of the pottery bowl.
The reed mat unearthed from Hemudu site in Yuyao, Zhejiang Province is about 7000 years ago. 1958 The bamboo weaving unearthed at the site of the late Neolithic Age in Qianshanyang Village, Huzhou, Zhejiang Province is even more amazing, with more than 200 pieces, most of which are scraped.
The weaving techniques in this period are also quite exquisite, such as Chinese characters, crosses, diamonds, clubs and so on. The types of utensils are baskets, baskets, reeds, baskets and so on. In the Zhou Dynasty, it was very common to weave mats with cattail.
In the Han Dynasty, rushes (also known as rushes, Malan grasses and rushes) were woven into mats, which were produced in Sanfu (now central Shaanxi) and Hedong (now Xiaxian County, Shanxi). In the Tang Dynasty, the making of straw mats was very common. The rattan woven by Fujian and Guangdong, the straw woven by wickerwork in Cangzhou, Hebei and Zhou Pu (now Yongji and Hejin) are all famous handicrafts.