Wednesday, 13 August 2025

lotus tatting

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 Every year I try to tat something for our Independence Day celebrations.... if not a dedicated project, then using the tricolour in whatever I may be working on at the time. This year I felt it was much more vital given the international and more importantly our domestic situation where the parties who are in the opposition at the center keep peddling falsehoods and agenda-driven false narratives in order to show the world that Indian democracy is on shaky ground, the election process is flawed and manipulated, etc. They do not hesitate to bad-mouth the country and its institutions in their hatred towards the democratically elected Prime Minister. They cannot even digest our superiority in our  retaliation (Operation Sindoor) to the terror attack on Indian tourists by nationals from the neighbouring country! 

Lotus is our national flower and this is my prototype. 
Now you may ask where is the third colour?! Good question.
I had started by using this motif as a charm for a bracelet with a white tatted band/braid, sprinkled with some blue. Every colour has its symbolic value which I have explained in previous years.
Now I wonder whether I will have sufficient time.
Another idea is to tat a few more motifs and glue to a greeting card, with tatted blue/white chains representing water. 
Which do you prefer?
I chose ANKARS style stacked rings or ring on ring technique. Though incidental, I like the fact that this technique came from Russia. I've read more Russian literature than American!

LOTUS  MOTIF 
(prototype) Pattern by Muskaan © Aug2025  
Single shuttle. Starting from the left orange ring ....
NOTE - since this is a prototype, there are a few count changes made along the way for the petals. I am happy with the flower count but the green rings can be stacked a bit more. Hence some tweaking of count will be needed. 
Start ring by leaving a small loop and tail over tails. This loop is later used to make a shepherd's crook join at the end. https://tipsaroundthehome.blogspot.com/search?q=shepherd+crook
ringA: 19 - 4 - 15. dnrw
ringB: {lies above A} 15 +(to A) 5 - 5 - 15. dnrw
ringC: {lies above B} 15 +(to B) 6 - 6 - 15. dnrw
ringD: {lies under C} 15 +(to C) 5 - 5 - 15. dnrw
ringE: {lies under D} 15 +(to D) 4 - 19. dnrw
Attach green thread and cut and hide orange tail.
ringF: 10 - 4 - 6. dnrw
ringG: {lies above F} 6 +(to F) 6 - 6 - 6. dnrw
ringH: {lies under G} 6 +(to G) 4 - 10. 
Join to starting loop at base of ringA and cut and hide tail.
TIP: I will join rings F & H or make the segments longer than 6ds in order to make the overlap more visible.

I don't know how original this motif is - it seems pretty basic to me. If you have seen anything similar, do please let me know so that we can acknowledge the designer.

In Anchor pearl cotton size 8 (equivalent to Lizbeth size 20) the motif is 3.5cms wide and 3cms high.

I had trouble with closing the large rings with this thread and am thankful it did not break. It did flip the last half-stitch and I had to rectify it each time despite care and precaution while closing. After the first two rings I remembered Patty Dowden's Working with Large Rings tips and closed the ring in two phases (like in the dimpled yorkie) - https://tipsaroundthehome.blogspot.com/2015/03/experimenting-with-colours.html

Let's see what tomorrow brings - hopefully plenty of time to decide, tat, and complete for 15th August to celebrate #HarGharTiranga!

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