I never realized that netting is so similar to tatting, and that I could use my tatting shuttles for very fine netting! Thank you for the clear explanation!
Thanks so for your comment. I was thinking I have a netting shuttle somewhere in my work storage mess. Then I saw your comment. I know right where my couple dozen tatting shuttles are! I should have thought of that myself. And now I think my balls of size 10 crochet cotton that arre too thick for tatting would work well for making a few shopping bags. Last year my state past a law that we have to pay for plastic bags at the grocery. They want us to bring our own bags. I have been fighting cancer for over a year. I am not strong enough to sit at the sewing machine to make fabric ones. I didn't like the patterns for crochet bags I found. And until now I didn't know how to make net bags. Problem of finding my grandma's net shuttle sovled.
I couldn't resist it, so I went to Sally's shop and bought netting supplies to get going! I don't know when they'll arrive, I'm a long way away. (Cat is another story, I'm trying to persuade her to move in, it's a long saga.)
Thank you for another beautiful demonstration - I had no idea that you needed just a small stick and a shuttle for your cord and you can make beautiful nets
What a goldmine of useful information Sally is! Great that she makes so much of her enthusiasms and skills, and is supported to do it. (Instead of strange and impractical, like me...) I'd love to see her do a book of these artisan crafts, easier to follow over time than a series of videos, and more durable if the internet crashes. I have many artisan craft books but few cover these sorts of skills. Thanks so much for these videos, they are skills that kept humans alive and comfortable for millenia, and never know when we may need them again.
I've always heard that tatting came from sailors repairing their fishing nets. Seeing you do this work reminds so much of tatting that It's plainly true.
Let me tell you how I discovered your video... I was reading something about Serbian and Montenegrin cuisine and local cheese-making and old processing, then I remember my grandmother using nettle instead of rennet, then i opened a new tab to look that up and the article mentioned that in WWI German uniforms were made of 85% nettle fibers. Then I wanted to see how that was done and your video was first to pop up. There you go. I loved the video and you were fantastic and here comes a subscriber.
Four years later I found her via a video about medieval Scandinavian clothing. Someone mentioned her in the comments for a good explanation to build a loop. I'm also a new subscriber 😊
i googled "DIY hay net for horse" (in german it's a "Heu Netz" , literally a "hay net") and couldn't find any video tutorial. But then I tried "DIY net bag" and found this video. Perfect! the loops going all the way around is exactly what i was looking for and i cant wait to make a bag like this one for our greedy pony to eat hay out of. He keeps ripping the storebought ones. Now I can choose a suitable rope and make a slow feeding hay bag for basically nothing. Looks like fun too. :D
Just wanted to thank you for this wonderful tutorial! I followed it using leftover fingering weight wool yarn from my stash, and created a nice net bag to store surplus yarn in. I really enjoyed making it, and plan to make more soon!
Gods damn it - you're all smarter than me. I can't figure this damnable thing out. I have string around every finger and toe and can't move now. :( And I'm only 3 minutes into the video!
@@dr.lexwinter8604 Don't feel badly! The tutorial is easy to follow, but that does not make it easy to actually do. I'd been working on and off with knitting and crochet for years before I tried this. You are not less smart - trust me! You've just specialized in other things until now, maybe. :)
I was concerned that you were going to put the cat in your finished net to weight it down! LOLOL! Seriously, I've not seen any other YT videos on making a net bag! Thank you so much!!
Wonderful netting tutorial! I've been thinking of getting into netting for some time, but hadn't found many clear and concise demonstrations like this one! As a crocheter, it was nice to see that the method of increasing stitches in the round was very familiar to me.
Hello Roy...if I may add an additional small point as well...(validation I teach rigging, weaving, and indigenous life skills)...There are many vernacular "local" names for things, so without seeing a picture or demonstration of your "gooseneck knot"...I can't speak to its validity. I can say that a "gooseneck" in several translations is a simple overhand knot typically tied at the top of a sack, and more commonly today a plastic bag... What Sally tied in her beginning was...in the common parlance of English...is best known as a..."Lark's Head"..."Cow Hitch"...and if double (or more) twisted a "cat's paw." A "goose knot"...if that is what you meant...is a "splice" or "knot"...on the working ends of two cords to bring them together...or...to splice twine to make a longer section yet is not a secure knot at all... What I believe Sally was going for (if this is an attempt at a traditional Roman and/or European vintage "netting knot"...would be called an..." Ossel hitch"...This knot is used to attach a rope or line to another main line very often found in historical Scottish gill nets, as one example, to tie small line to a larger rope that supported the net. The word "Ossel" is from old Gaelic meaning..." gill net"...though there is debate about Flemish origins as well...The Ossel Hitch is related to other fishing origins like the "snood"..." snell"...and gangion." I could go on as this is a lifelong passion in some of the work I do professionally...
@@audeforcione-lambert4293 Most welcome and for sharing the knot's term in french...I love learning such things...It is one of the many pleasures of a full life...having the wonders of all we can learn from one another...As I know it, from the European perspective, "Lark's Head" is one of the oldest terms for this knot in many cultures from there...
The troublle with me watching your videos is that they make me want to have a bash at all of them, and I already have a lot of irons in the fire! Still, I will hopefully try this at some point, thank you!
Very good video. This is another method of making a net bag that I found interesting. When I finish the last row for my net bag, I put two lines together on my netting needle to double up this row. You showed how to add a row at the beginning but there also another method of reducing a row by taking two loops together and making your single sheet bend. Keep up the good work.
Finally I think I will do this, after I watched it several times. I have kids and this seems to be the perfect bag for sand toys, because the sand will just flow out and the toys will stay in :D
Quite nicely done, and the bird song in the background made it very enjoyable and relaxing to listen to. Will be adding this to my list of: "The things I've done with 'string'." Crochet, knitting, macrame', tatting, weaving and even spinning it (wheel, drop, support, and once even by candy cane!). The only other thing (that I'm not interested in at all) that I haven't done is bobbin lace. Thanks for making it accessible!
I'll have to make a market bag like this! I've got a pair of antique netted gloves with holes in the fingers and this gives me a good idea of how to make the repairs. I think it's best to practice with something larger first. I've crocheted mesh market bags before but this seems like a good entree to netting.
I've been assigned the task of repairing hay nets for horses this looks like one of the very best approaches. This is a skill that obviously requires some practice, but will be very valuable in the end.
Brilliantly done! I wish I'd had this when I was trying to make a roman bag... had to stumble through all sorts of websites and videos to pull the information together. Most of the videos were not useful, because they taught outright wrong information. Your video is fantastic and useful and will make it so no one has an excuse for not having a bag. Thanks for making this!
This is amazing. We had these net bags in GDR a lot made out opf plastic fiber. This could also result ina planting pot holder or also a necklace for stones from the beach. It looks for me like a special kind of crochet combined with macramee. Or... you could make a hammock out of it, too. Just amazing.
This is amazing! And wonderfully well explained! Like it that your videos are not filmed in a nervous way, explained calmly and you can follow every bit of information.
i tried to make a net a few years back, but the instructions i was following were so confusing. i randomly found this video the other day, it sparked my interest again, so i got my needles and twine out, and wouldn't you know it if i didn't manage to make a small net bag. Thank you for the clear tutorial.
So... Another cool thing forms to make for my grout in my camper van. I am so excited to have found your channel, and I can't wait for a break to engage in my new found self sufficiency drive 😀
Yay! I have seen net bags for sale, but I always tell myself that I don't need them, not really, but, BUT I can justify making one myself as I can use second-hand materials to reduce waste and learn a skill I have been wanting for a while. 😊
Very nice, Sally!! You are delightful. I am So grateful for your teaching because your knowledge and putting it out there is helping to make a design innovation concept I had 10 years ago now possible that I think will make millions of people's lives better every hour they are awake every day.
this is the first video that i watched from your channel, i got inspired from a spanish documentary talking about net making/repairs on the coast of spain and decided to look online to see if there were 3d printed netting needle patterns, lo and behold, there were. it took me a while to wrap my head around the process but i’ve since watched a lot of the nettle processing and was endlessly fascinated. i made some good progress with this tutorial, and hope to finish my bag soon :0)
Nice one Sally. Net making is such a useful skill to have and has many applications in survival and bushcraft. I, myself used to make my own nets for catching rabbits, purse nets, gatenets and longnets. Thanks for sharing your skills, I find your presentation style, very agreeable so it's a thumbs-up and a sub from me.
I'm following along with the video. Currently adding 3rd row of 1L 2L. it's ugly, I've made mistakes, overloaded the needle a few times, but progress has been made. Thanks for the demonstration.
Watching you working on nets has inspired me to start working on shuttles and gauge sticks ;) I'm a bit of a woodworker, while my wife describes her hobby as "string". Am I right in thinking that an important feature of the gauge and the shuttle is that the finish on both should be quite smooth? Wouldn't do to have the string catching on the tools all the time.
@@SallyPointer Made the tools. Got some butcher's twine for an experimental run. Totally confused almost instantly and while my mind can follow your instructions, my hands and eyes cannot ;) The twine immediately twists upon itself forming extra loops, the first three or four tries at making the first knot Un made the knot instead ;) Finally got the first knot (I think) and promptly lost the base loop that the next knot needs to go around. Have I made a poor material choice with the butcher's twine, or is it just a matter of learning the process and teaching the fingers to keep the twine from twisting, etc. ?
I love this!!! You make it look so easy! I'm going to give it a go! Thank you, for your instructional videos! Also...the green wool flat cap arrived beautifully, and I adore it!! Cheers!
Thanks for the great tutorial. Just a suggestion for future videos on this type of thing; a different colored background to contrast with the thread would make it easier to see where the thread is going. Also larger cording would make seeing easier, just for demonstration purposes. Thanks again.
Hi Sally, have you mentioned in one of your videos about using a flame of some description to singe off the loose fibres? I can remember reading it somewhere but I cannot remember where. I have made an onion bag out of elcheapo jute string and it has a more fuzz than a newly hatched squab. Thank you for the inspiration to weave my bag.
It's not something I've ever needed to do, especially as fine fluff will quickly wear off as the item gets used,, but I know a lot of people do like singing off loose bits
I saw you in a video of good and basic and instantly subscribed :) I really like using this starting loop as well when I make dipnets. You are the first i have seen on youtube starting a net like this.
Just amazing... how did you ever figure it out ? Now I see why the kitty comes. Not only various strings and knots but a weaving, a challenge forever blessed by feline paws. In a way the loops and layers remind me of "Hello Quatum". It's a challenge game , that starts off with a particle, then several more, you arrange them,sequence them "loop"in 1 layer, then layer them and "loop the layers" .Measured distances but different patterns of particles, arrangements when viewed singularly, but when finished is a strong useful (random) quantum of sorts. Your lattice knotting & weaving is similar in a way, hard to explain but an old mind interpets the repitition and loose structure that way. You randomly create a shape, cubic storage size, can change it at any time... Forgive the rambling...I need to find some Nettles,my bag of twine....a can of tuna to lure a ," random kitty" Your skills are most impressive. !! Thank you ever so much for sharing it.
if you make a loop to the left when you pinch line with the thumb and put needle through when going up you don't need to go through the loop as a separate move to form the knot as loop is already there. bit difficult to explain in words as English is not my first language, hope it is clear. I have mended nets for over 40 years it is kind of automatic for me by now. currently making nettle cordage for the nettle challenge and will actually make a landing net for fly-fishing roughly the same way you did here just a frame of steam bent birch. oh, also you are doing the correct knot on the start, but It is a cowhitch, nog clovehitch, clovehitch would twist the loop, this would make first set of mesh twist if you remove the starting loop (something you do when making a fishing net).
And that makes you wonder just how much time was put into fishing nets back in days of yore. Those things must have been a bit of an investment, compared to modern machine-made stuff where people don't seem too upset at letting them go adrift since they're much more easily replaced. (And bad for the environment too.)
Well, you have to remember that they weren't sitting around in their spare time watching UA-cam videos either... Just think how much time that frees up... :)
I wish i was taught this rather than crochet and embroidery, as a net bag and the makings of a simple fish net would have helped me more than making scarves or embellishing pillow cases
@@sallymoen6371: Crochet has its uses, and I have decorated various things with embroidery over the years. I'd say it would be best if children could be taught a wide variety of crafts and shown what those crafts were used for in the past.
This is a really fabulous video, but I'm having trouble seeing the exact knots and how they should look as the camera is focused on the backdrop. I would really love to see a remake, I've been trying to make this net for a while and can't seem to get it!
Have a look at my Instagram account on @sallypointerheritage I posted a short clip a week or two back of a section of net being worked. There's also my Flat Net video on my UA-cam channel which also goes through the same knot. That might help
Thank you for this wonderful tutorial! Can you please share with me where I can buy the linen twine you used? (I’m in the U.S. but will be visiting London soon if it’s not available here.) Thanks so much!
With paracord I have no real idea, it's not something I work with much, and size of cord and gauge of net will make a difference. Why not make a small sample with a known length and calculate up from there for the size bag you want? In my cord, a typical 'largish ball of string' is plenty, but paracord is usually pretty hefty stuff
@@SallyPointer Thank you...I am tinkering with it now...I have made two so far. Question, does doing the 1 and 2 knots alternatively create a wider base for the bag?
@@theurbanabo yes, it's fairly intuitive, if you need wider again, do another set of increases in the following round, maybe an increase every fourth stitch next time rather that every other one and that should give a really wide bag
@@SallyPointer Cool! That is what I figured...the first one, I made following your instructions and using store-bought jutte twine, is approximately 15" (38cm) long and 3" (8cm) wide at the base unfilled. The second one (I did two rounds) is larger, being 24" (60cm) long and approximately 5" (13cm) wide at the base - It looks too difficult to measure volume ;) Anyways, thank you again M'Lady...I have been wanting to know how to do this technique for a loooooooong time! Cheers! :D
I never realized that netting is so similar to tatting, and that I could use my tatting shuttles for very fine netting! Thank you for the clear explanation!
Thanks so for your comment. I was thinking I have a netting shuttle somewhere in my work storage mess. Then I saw your comment. I know right where my couple dozen tatting shuttles are! I should have thought of that myself. And now I think my balls of size 10 crochet cotton that arre too thick for tatting would work well for making a few shopping bags. Last year my state past a law that we have to pay for plastic bags at the grocery. They want us to bring our own bags. I have been fighting cancer for over a year. I am not strong enough to sit at the sewing machine to make fabric ones. I didn't like the patterns for crochet bags I found. And until now I didn't know how to make net bags. Problem of finding my grandma's net shuttle sovled.
@@Anne5440_ Hope you are feeling well.
@@cosmiccoyotedog-doreenb9605 thanks I am slowly getting stronger, treatments are working.
@@cosmiccoyotedog-doreenb9605
@@Anne5440_ that's so great 👍
I am a newby , so I need : 1. Thread, 2.netting shuttle, 3.netting gauge, 4. Cat . Thank you for an interesting film.
I couldn't resist it, so I went to Sally's shop and bought netting supplies to get going! I don't know when they'll arrive, I'm a long way away. (Cat is another story, I'm trying to persuade her to move in, it's a long saga.)
Thank you for another beautiful demonstration - I had no idea that you needed just a small stick and a shuttle for your cord and you can make beautiful nets
The cat provides a nicely contrasting background that makes it easier to see what you're doing.
What a goldmine of useful information Sally is! Great that she makes so much of her enthusiasms and skills, and is supported to do it. (Instead of strange and impractical, like me...) I'd love to see her do a book of these artisan crafts, easier to follow over time than a series of videos, and more durable if the internet crashes. I have many artisan craft books but few cover these sorts of skills. Thanks so much for these videos, they are skills that kept humans alive and comfortable for millenia, and never know when we may need them again.
I've always heard that tatting came from sailors repairing their fishing nets. Seeing you do this work reminds so much of tatting that It's plainly true.
Let me tell you how I discovered your video... I was reading something about Serbian and Montenegrin cuisine and local cheese-making and old processing, then I remember my grandmother using nettle instead of rennet, then i opened a new tab to look that up and the article mentioned that in WWI German uniforms were made of 85% nettle fibers. Then I wanted to see how that was done and your video was first to pop up. There you go. I loved the video and you were fantastic and here comes a subscriber.
It's amazing where these trains of thought take us!
Four years later I found her via a video about medieval Scandinavian clothing. Someone mentioned her in the comments for a good explanation to build a loop. I'm also a new subscriber 😊
i googled "DIY hay net for horse" (in german it's a "Heu Netz" , literally a "hay net") and couldn't find any video tutorial. But then I tried "DIY net bag" and found this video. Perfect!
the loops going all the way around is exactly what i was looking for and i cant wait to make a bag like this one for our greedy pony to eat hay out of. He keeps ripping the storebought ones. Now I can choose a suitable rope and make a slow feeding hay bag for basically nothing. Looks like fun too. :D
That sounds a perfect use for this
Just wanted to thank you for this wonderful tutorial! I followed it using leftover fingering weight wool yarn from my stash, and created a nice net bag to store surplus yarn in. I really enjoyed making it, and plan to make more soon!
My goodness, that was such an easy to follow tutorial! You, lady, have a gift, and thanks for sharing it.
Thank you very much! I'm having a lot of fun sharing my interests with everyone.
Urât
Gods damn it - you're all smarter than me. I can't figure this damnable thing out. I have string around every finger and toe and can't move now. :( And I'm only 3 minutes into the video!
@@dr.lexwinter8604 Don't feel badly! The tutorial is easy to follow, but that does not make it easy to actually do. I'd been working on and off with knitting and crochet for years before I tried this. You are not less smart - trust me! You've just specialized in other things until now, maybe. :)
Thank you for this. I'd always struggled with making nets using macrame. Making a net and it's cording is invaluable to an independent mind.
I loved what you had to teach us today. I felt so happy when the blackbird started to sing. Pure heaven!
I was concerned that you were going to put the cat in your finished net to weight it down! LOLOL!
Seriously, I've not seen any other YT videos on making a net bag! Thank you so much!!
Thank you so much for this wonderful video, Sally!
Your supervisory cat has a beautiful coat! I must give netting another go soon. Very clear explanation, thank you!
This just strikes me as a very good thing to know how to do! You never know when it will come in handy. Thanks!
I smiled when the kitty joined to investigate 😂🐱❤️
Wonderful netting tutorial! I've been thinking of getting into netting for some time, but hadn't found many clear and concise demonstrations like this one! As a crocheter, it was nice to see that the method of increasing stitches in the round was very familiar to me.
Excellent tutorial! Thank you.
One small point: it’s not a “clove hitch” it’s a “goose neck knot”.
Even so, very easy to follow.
Yes, I misspoke there, the downside of not scripting videos!
Hello Roy...if I may add an additional small point as well...(validation I teach rigging, weaving, and indigenous life skills)...There are many vernacular "local" names for things, so without seeing a picture or demonstration of your "gooseneck knot"...I can't speak to its validity. I can say that a "gooseneck" in several translations is a simple overhand knot typically tied at the top of a sack, and more commonly today a plastic bag...
What Sally tied in her beginning was...in the common parlance of English...is best known as a..."Lark's Head"..."Cow Hitch"...and if double (or more) twisted a "cat's paw."
A "goose knot"...if that is what you meant...is a "splice" or "knot"...on the working ends of two cords to bring them together...or...to splice twine to make a longer section yet is not a secure knot at all...
What I believe Sally was going for (if this is an attempt at a traditional Roman and/or European vintage "netting knot"...would be called an..." Ossel hitch"...This knot is used to attach a rope or line to another main line very often found in historical Scottish gill nets, as one example, to tie small line to a larger rope that supported the net. The word "Ossel" is from old Gaelic meaning..." gill net"...though there is debate about Flemish origins as well...The Ossel Hitch is related to other fishing origins like the "snood"..." snell"...and gangion." I could go on as this is a lifelong passion in some of the work I do professionally...
Thank you I was so confused! And here in Canada you would also call that knot a lark's head knot (or in french noeud d'alouette) ;)
@@audeforcione-lambert4293 Most welcome and for sharing the knot's term in french...I love learning such things...It is one of the many pleasures of a full life...having the wonders of all we can learn from one another...As I know it, from the European perspective, "Lark's Head" is one of the oldest terms for this knot in many cultures from there...
The troublle with me watching your videos is that they make me want to have a bash at all of them, and I already have a lot of irons in the fire! Still, I will hopefully try this at some point, thank you!
Very good video. This is another method of making a net bag that I found interesting. When I finish the last row for my net bag, I put two lines together on my netting needle to double up this row. You showed how to add a row at the beginning but there also another method of reducing a row by taking two loops together and making your single sheet bend. Keep up the good work.
Finally I think I will do this, after I watched it several times. I have kids and this seems to be the perfect bag for sand toys, because the sand will just flow out and the toys will stay in :D
Quite nicely done, and the bird song in the background made it very enjoyable and relaxing to listen to. Will be adding this to my list of: "The things I've done with 'string'." Crochet, knitting, macrame', tatting, weaving and even spinning it (wheel, drop, support, and once even by candy cane!). The only other thing (that I'm not interested in at all) that I haven't done is bobbin lace. Thanks for making it accessible!
I'll have to make a market bag like this! I've got a pair of antique netted gloves with holes in the fingers and this gives me a good idea of how to make the repairs. I think it's best to practice with something larger first. I've crocheted mesh market bags before but this seems like a good entree to netting.
I've been assigned the task of repairing hay nets for horses this looks like one of the very best approaches. This is a skill that obviously requires some practice, but will be very valuable in the end.
Fascinating to watch and surprisingly soothing to listen to. Thanks for sharing this process with us!
Brilliantly done! I wish I'd had this when I was trying to make a roman bag... had to stumble through all sorts of websites and videos to pull the information together. Most of the videos were not useful, because they taught outright wrong information. Your video is fantastic and useful and will make it so no one has an excuse for not having a bag. Thanks for making this!
This is amazing. We had these net bags in GDR a lot made out opf plastic fiber. This could also result ina planting pot holder or also a necklace for stones from the beach. It looks for me like a special kind of crochet combined with macramee. Or... you could make a hammock out of it, too. Just amazing.
And scientists think; first there was twine, then there was nets. aa some of the earliest technologies humans used!
This is amazing! And wonderfully well explained!
Like it that your videos are not filmed in a nervous way, explained calmly and you can follow every bit of information.
i tried to make a net a few years back, but the instructions i was following were so confusing. i randomly found this video the other day, it sparked my interest again, so i got my needles and twine out, and wouldn't you know it if i didn't manage to make a small net bag. Thank you for the clear tutorial.
So... Another cool thing forms to make for my grout in my camper van. I am so excited to have found your channel, and I can't wait for a break to engage in my new found self sufficiency drive 😀
Yay! I have seen net bags for sale, but I always tell myself that I don't need them, not really, but, BUT I can justify making one myself as I can use second-hand materials to reduce waste and learn a skill I have been wanting for a while. 😊
I just love watching whatever you do. So comforting.♥️🇨🇦
Very nice, Sally!! You are delightful. I am
So grateful for your teaching because your knowledge and putting it out there is helping to make a design innovation concept I had 10 years ago now possible that I think will make millions of people's lives better every hour they are awake every day.
this is the first video that i watched from your channel, i got inspired from a spanish documentary talking about net making/repairs on the coast of spain and decided to look online to see if there were 3d printed netting needle patterns, lo and behold, there were. it took me a while to wrap my head around the process but i’ve since watched a lot of the nettle processing and was endlessly fascinated. i made some good progress with this tutorial, and hope to finish my bag soon :0)
Love the birdsin the background
Cats like being near you while you do stuff in general. It means they like you :)
So many recommendations i find interest in! Thank you for the time knowledge and skill. I look forward to replicating! And watching more!
Thank you very much. I was struggling in the beginning, but then got it. So quick to make and so functional.
Nice one Sally. Net making is such a useful skill to have and has many applications in survival and bushcraft. I, myself used to make my own nets for catching rabbits, purse nets, gatenets and longnets. Thanks for sharing your skills, I find your presentation style, very agreeable so it's a thumbs-up and a sub from me.
The Roman net-making equivalent of a magic circle!
Thank you, I made a net bag to hold a gourd canteen in today, next up a bag for foraging mushrooms
I just ordered a set of norwegian style shuttles and I'm looking forward to making a couple nets like this =)
This tutorial is excellent! Thank you so much, Sally. So glad I found your channel here.
Lovely work and definitely one of my next projects.
Thanks! I'm going to make a net bag just to hang on the wall and look pretty. I'm using hemp string. Very satisfying.
I'm following along with the video. Currently adding 3rd row of 1L 2L. it's ugly, I've made mistakes, overloaded the needle a few times, but progress has been made. Thanks for the demonstration.
Watching you working on nets has inspired me to start working on shuttles and gauge sticks ;) I'm a bit of a woodworker, while my wife describes her hobby as "string". Am I right in thinking that an important feature of the gauge and the shuttle is that the finish on both should be quite smooth? Wouldn't do to have the string catching on the tools all the time.
Yes, smooth, and the shuttle should be no wider than the gauge stick
@@SallyPointer Made the tools. Got some butcher's twine for an experimental run. Totally confused almost instantly and while my mind can follow your instructions, my hands and eyes cannot ;) The twine immediately twists upon itself forming extra loops, the first three or four tries at making the first knot Un made the knot instead ;) Finally got the first knot (I think) and promptly lost the base loop that the next knot needs to go around. Have I made a poor material choice with the butcher's twine, or is it just a matter of learning the process and teaching the fingers to keep the twine from twisting, etc. ?
@@peterellis4262: Sally mentioned that the string/twine/cordage can have a tendency to twist on itself.
I love this!!! You make it look so easy! I'm going to give it a go! Thank you, for your instructional videos! Also...the green wool flat cap arrived beautifully, and I adore it!! Cheers!
Hooray!
The cat knows you are trapped for a time ;) Wonderful explanation and demonstration.
I'm barely getting the hang of nalbinding these days and now I feel like netting might get added to the waiting list.😂
Lovely work ❤
Frohe Weihnachten und ein Gutes Neues Jahr 🎄
Thanks for the great tutorial. Just a suggestion for future videos on this type of thing; a different colored background to contrast with the thread would make it easier to see where the thread is going. Also larger cording would make seeing easier, just for demonstration purposes. Thanks again.
you've got some very good birds!
Loved the video. Very easy to follow thank you so much for taking your time.
Really pleased it was useful
The ultimate laundry bag?? YES.
Great work.I was just looking for this.This will be very useful at fishing.Thank you very much.
00:02:01
Beautiful bird chirping.
Definitely going to make a few of these. Our George cat would've joined in rather than being companiable.
That's very helpful. Great for project at home. ☺
I made a net tonight! Thank you so much!
That's fantastic!
This is great. I'll have to try and make one.
Really a fun video! I'm trying it out only with jute string and a 2 inch gauge. You might find it faster using the back-of-the-hand method.
Making one now, can’t wait to try it with my own fibers someday, thanks so much!
Something I planned on learning and now have a few weeks to do it! Lol
Thank you!
My name is Gage, this video makes me so happy hahaha
Thank you. Your video was very informative.
I was looking for this tutorial for a long. it was really nice, especially with your pretty accent that made it much more interesting
Thank you!
Hi Sally, have you mentioned in one of your videos about using a flame of some description to singe off the loose fibres? I can remember reading it somewhere but I cannot remember where. I have made an onion bag out of elcheapo jute string and it has a more fuzz than a newly hatched squab. Thank you for the inspiration to weave my bag.
It's not something I've ever needed to do, especially as fine fluff will quickly wear off as the item gets used,, but I know a lot of people do like singing off loose bits
Very very informative, I have now made my first draw net bag and moving on to the next
Thankyou
That's wonderful to hear! Thanks for letting me know it was useful 🙂
But not mastered the slip knot at the beginning
I used a stainless steel ring
Great makes
You are such a good teacher! :D
I'm roman but I'm not able to do this things, i'm learning 😂😂 thank you!
Thanks for making this video, you have explained it well!.
Thank you for sharing. I have supervisory cats that appear in most of my videos as well.
Good. It is similar to the system in India,which is called"sikyam", in sanskrit. Usually used to keep dairy products. Thank you.
Just found your channel. It's like Christmas came super early!
Very helpful tutorial.
Thanks for your wonderfully informative videos, and to Good and Basic for the introduction!
I saw you in a video of good and basic and instantly subscribed :) I really like using this starting loop as well when I make dipnets. You are the first i have seen on youtube starting a net like this.
Just amazing... how did you ever figure it out ? Now I see why the kitty comes. Not only various strings and knots but a weaving, a challenge forever blessed by feline paws. In a way the loops and layers remind me of "Hello Quatum". It's a challenge game , that starts off with a particle, then several more, you arrange them,sequence them "loop"in 1 layer, then layer them and "loop the layers" .Measured distances but different patterns of particles, arrangements when viewed singularly, but when finished is a strong useful (random) quantum of sorts. Your lattice knotting & weaving is similar in a way, hard to explain but an old mind interpets the repitition and loose structure that way. You randomly create a shape, cubic storage size, can change it at any time... Forgive the rambling...I need to find some Nettles,my bag of twine....a can of tuna to lure a ," random kitty"
Your skills are most impressive. !! Thank you ever so much for sharing it.
if you make a loop to the left when you pinch line with the thumb and put needle through when going up you don't need to go through the loop as a separate move to form the knot as loop is already there. bit difficult to explain in words as English is not my first language, hope it is clear.
I have mended nets for over 40 years it is kind of automatic for me by now.
currently making nettle cordage for the nettle challenge and will actually make a landing net for fly-fishing roughly the same way you did here just a frame of steam bent birch.
oh, also you are doing the correct knot on the start, but It is a cowhitch, nog clovehitch, clovehitch would twist the loop, this would make first set of mesh twist if you remove the starting loop (something you do when making a fishing net).
You are absolutely right, I used the wrong word for the knot. I'd usually call this a larkshead knot but got my words wrong
Wonderful!
And that makes you wonder just how much time was put into fishing nets back in days of yore. Those things must have been a bit of an investment, compared to modern machine-made stuff where people don't seem too upset at letting them go adrift since they're much more easily replaced. (And bad for the environment too.)
Time is a major factor in any historical project, we just aren't used to thinking about time in a way that we may have done in the past.
Well, you have to remember that they weren't sitting around in their spare time watching UA-cam videos either... Just think how much time that frees up... :)
I wish i was taught this rather than crochet and embroidery, as a net bag and the makings of a simple fish net would have helped me more than making scarves or embellishing pillow cases
Net bags can be crocheted too.
@@sallymoen6371: Crochet has its uses, and I have decorated various things with embroidery over the years. I'd say it would be best if children could be taught a wide variety of crafts and shown what those crafts were used for in the past.
thank your so much for teaching, heart - from USA.
This is a really fabulous video, but I'm having trouble seeing the exact knots and how they should look as the camera is focused on the backdrop. I would really love to see a remake, I've been trying to make this net for a while and can't seem to get it!
Have a look at my Instagram account on @sallypointerheritage I posted a short clip a week or two back of a section of net being worked. There's also my Flat Net video on my UA-cam channel which also goes through the same knot. That might help
@@SallyPointer Thanks very much! I'll check both out. 😊
Thanks for sharing.
Thnxs for uploading and sharing this
👍🏻🇺🇸
Thank you for this wonderful tutorial! Can you please share with me where I can buy the linen twine you used? (I’m in the U.S. but will be visiting London soon if it’s not available here.) Thanks so much!
Have a look for linen upholstery twine if you can't get anything else
Only different brands of jute seem to be available. Will that suffice? Thanks for your time.@@SallyPointer
Thank you, great teacher. Btw my cat helps me too. Usually she try’s laying right on my work and hands. :-)
Where would we be without helpful cats!
very cool thank you for the knowledge
Lobster men make these in a plastic cord for bate bags. I’m in Maine on the USA coast
How would we make a finer net? I mean much smaller spaces/holes?
Just use a smaller gauge stick
@@SallyPointer thank you for replying!
Wax the first few inches of the thread, then the loop slides easily shut when joining the ring.
Great idea!
Thank you for the video, I want to make a net bag out of para cord to use on my kayak. Can you tell me roughly how much cord I should need please?
With paracord I have no real idea, it's not something I work with much, and size of cord and gauge of net will make a difference. Why not make a small sample with a known length and calculate up from there for the size bag you want? In my cord, a typical 'largish ball of string' is plenty, but paracord is usually pretty hefty stuff
Thank you :)
Thank you very much! I will try my hand at this soon.
You are most welcome. Hope you have fun with it!
@@SallyPointer Thank you...I am tinkering with it now...I have made two so far. Question, does doing the 1 and 2 knots alternatively create a wider base for the bag?
@@theurbanabo yes, it's fairly intuitive, if you need wider again, do another set of increases in the following round, maybe an increase every fourth stitch next time rather that every other one and that should give a really wide bag
@@SallyPointer Cool! That is what I figured...the first one, I made following your instructions and using store-bought jutte twine, is approximately 15" (38cm) long and 3" (8cm) wide at the base unfilled. The second one (I did two rounds) is larger, being 24" (60cm) long and approximately 5" (13cm) wide at the base - It looks too difficult to measure volume ;) Anyways, thank you again M'Lady...I have been wanting to know how to do this technique for a loooooooong time! Cheers! :D
@@SallyPointer BTW...I put something in the tip-jar for you. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge! Now off to make another bag ;)
Pusscat’s name?? Nothing like a bit of moral support as you make and teach. ❤❤❤
Tesla is the orange cat, his mother Koru sometimes makes an appearance in these videos too
Nice tutorial thanks mam...,🍭🍭🍭