How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern Template (No.1229): Complete Guide

How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern : This is a DIY jewelry tutorial for making Swarovski crystal and suede tassel earrings.

  • “No.1229” (pattern or project number)
  • Measurements in centimeters: 6cm, 14cm, 15cm, 2cm
  • Letters A and B marking different sections
  • Multiple rectangular outlines with what appear to be attachment or connection points (small circles at the corners)

Because the image has no written instructions beyond the numbers, I will provide a complete how-to guide, full meaning, and full understanding based on what these measurements typically represent in macrame and paracord projects.


How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern Template (No.1229): Complete Guide
How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern Template (No.1229): Complete Guide

How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern Template (No.1229): Complete Guide

Full Meaning of the Diagram

ElementLikely Meaning
No.1229Pattern catalog number (common in Japanese or European macrame pattern books)
6cmHeight or width of a central section
A 14cmSection A length = 14cm (possibly the main body of a bracelet, strap, or bag handle)
B 15cmSection B length = 15cm (possibly a different section, or the total length including fringe/ends)
2cmSmall margin, seam allowance, or loop length
Rectangular outlinesDifferent layers or sections of the project
Small circlesAttachment points (where cords pass through or where knots are tied)

Possible Project Types

Given your previous files (bracelets, paracord projects, knot guides), this diagram could be one of the following:

Project TypeHow the Measurements Apply
Multi-section braceletA 14cm main body + 2cm loop + 15cm total length
Watch band6cm for the watch face area, 14cm for the strap
Bag handleTwo 15cm sections with a 6cm center grip
Keychain or lanyard14–15cm total length with 2cm loop at the end
Adjustable necklaceA 14cm fixed section + 15cm adjustable part

Full Understanding: How to Interpret the Numbers

Scenario 1: Bracelet with Loop Closure

MeasurementMeaning
14cm (A)Main knotted body of the bracelet
2cmThe loop (at one end) that the clasp or knot passes through
15cm (B)Total length including the loop (14 + 1? or 14 + 2? = 16, so careful)

If A = 14cm and the loop is 2cm, total could be 16cm. But B is labeled 15cm. This suggests:

  • A and B are different sections, not added together
  • Or B is the other end of the same bracelet

Scenario 2: Two-Part Project (e.g., Bag or Belt)

SectionLengthPurpose
A14cmFront panel or main decorative area
B15cmBack panel or adjustable strap
6cm6cmCenter connector or width
2cm2cmFold-over seam or fringe length

Scenario 3: Jig or Template for Tying

In macrame, you often create a tying jig (as in your LIND-Z pattern). This diagram could be the blueprint for a jig:

MeasurementJig Use
6cmDistance between two pegs for a small loop
14cmMain peg-to-peg distance for the bracelet body
15cmMaximum working length (including slack)
2cmExtra space for tightening

How-To Guide: Using This Diagram for a Purple Macrame Bracelet

Let me assume this diagram is for a two-section bracelet with a loop closure — a common project type that fits your artisanal purple theme.

Step 1 — Determine the Project

Based on the numbers, you are making:

  • A main body (14cm long)
  • A loop end (2cm diameter or length)
  • Total finished length approximately 15–16cm (suitable for a small to medium wrist, or an anklet)

Step 2 — Gather Materials

MaterialSpecification
Purple macrame cord2–3mm thickness
Length neededApprox. wrist size × 1.5 to 2 (e.g., 16cm wrist → 24–32cm of cord per strand)
Number of strandsDepends on pattern; typical: 4 to 8 strands

Step 3 — Create the A Section (14cm)

Using your preferred knot (square knot, cobra, or shark jaw):

  • Tie a knotted section exactly 14cm in length
  • This becomes the main decorative body of the bracelet

Step 4 — Create the B Section (15cm)

The B section may be:

  • Option 1: The other half of the bracelet (e.g., the back side or the adjustable tail)
  • Option 2: A second identical panel that will be joined to the first

If B = 15cm and A = 14cm, the B section is 1cm longer — possibly for an adjustable sliding knot.

Step 5 — Add the 2cm Loop

At one end of the A section, create a 2cm loop:

  • Fold the cords back and tie a knot
  • The loop should be large enough to pass a button or diamond knot through

Step 6 — Add the 6cm Element

The 6cm measurement could be:

  • A center decorative panel (e.g., a monkey’s fist or Pan Chang knot that is 6cm in circumference)
  • The width of the bracelet (if it is a wide cuff)
  • A separate small section (like a connector between A and B)

If it is a width measurement, your purple bracelet should be 6cm wide at its widest point.

Step 7 — Assemble

Follow the diagram’s layout:

  1. Start with the 2cm loop
  2. Then tie the 14cm A section
  3. Add the 6cm center element (if separate)
  4. Finish with the 15cm B section

Step 8 — Final Adjustments

Measure the finished project. Adjust knot tension so the sections match the diagram’s dimensions exactly.


Common Mistakes & Fixes

MistakeCauseFix
Sections don’t match diagramKnot tension inconsistentUse a ruler as you tie; check every 2cm
2cm loop too small/bigGuessed instead of measuredUse a 2cm-wide template (e.g., a coin) to form the loop
6cm width too wide for wristMisinterpreted measurement6cm is very wide for a bracelet; consider this might be a bag handle instead
A and B sections reverseMislabeled which end is whichMark A and B on your project with tape

Connecting to Your Previous Patterns

PatternHow No.1229 Could Be Used
Square knot braceletA = 14cm of square knots, B = 15cm of half-knots
Shark jaw boneA = 14cm of shark jaw, B = 15cm of cobra finish
LIND-ZA = 14cm of dense Z-weave, 2cm loop
Pan Chang knotPlace a 6cm Pan Chang knot in the center
Monkey’s fistUse the 6cm measurement for the fist’s diameter

Sample Project: Purple Artisanal Bracelet Using No.1229

Design:

  • 2cm loop: Deep purple cord, single overhand knot
  • 14cm A section: LIND-Z weave (dense diagonal) in light and dark purple
  • 6cm center: Pan Chang knot in medium purple (approximately 6cm wide after tightening)
  • 15cm B section: Shark jaw bone weave in lavender and violet
  • Closure: Diamond lanyard knot (as in the shark jaw guide) that passes through the 2cm loop

Total finished length: Approximately 31cm (too long for a wrist — so this may actually be a lanyard or necklace)

Given the total of A+B (14+15=29cm) plus the loop and center, this project is likely a long lanyard, sunglass strap, or small bag handle, not a standard bracelet.


Final Pro Tip: Always Verify the Project Type

The diagram No.1229 does not specify what you are making. Before cutting cord:

  1. Check if the original source (book, magazine, or website) had a title or photo
  2. If 14cm + 15cm = 29cm is longer than your wrist (typically 15–20cm), then this is not a bracelet — it is a lanyard, belt, or strap
  3. Adjust the measurements proportionally for a bracelet: scale down by dividing all numbers by 2 (e.g., 7cm A, 7.5cm B, 3cm center, 1cm loop)

Summary: What No.1229 Teaches You

LessonTakeaway
Patterns use letters (A, B) to label sectionsEach section may have a different knot or color
Small measurements (2cm) are usually loops or marginsThese are critical for closures and fit
Center measurements (6cm) are often focal pointsIdeal for decorative knots like Pan Chang or monkey’s fist
Always verify total length before starting29cm is a lanyard, not a bracelet

Would you like me to create a scaled-down version of No.1229 for a standard 7-inch (18cm) wrist bracelet, with all measurements converted and a suggested purple knot sequence?

Thank you for sharing this image. It appears to be a technical diagram or pattern template — likely for a macrame project, bag, strap, or decorative panel. The image shows:

  • “No.1229” (pattern or project number)
  • Measurements in centimeters: 6cm, 14cm, 15cm, 2cm
  • Letters A and B marking different sections
  • Multiple rectangular outlines with what appear to be attachment or connection points (small circles at the corners)

Because the image has no written instructions beyond the numbers, I will provide a complete how-to guide, full meaning, and full understanding based on what these measurements typically represent in macrame and paracord projects.


How to Read & Use a Macrame Pattern Template (No.1229): Complete Guide

Full Meaning of the Diagram

ElementLikely Meaning
No.1229Pattern catalog number (common in Japanese or European macrame pattern books)
6cmHeight or width of a central section
A 14cmSection A length = 14cm (possibly the main body of a bracelet, strap, or bag handle)
B 15cmSection B length = 15cm (possibly a different section, or the total length including fringe/ends)
2cmSmall margin, seam allowance, or loop length
Rectangular outlinesDifferent layers or sections of the project
Small circlesAttachment points (where cords pass through or where knots are tied)

Possible Project Types

Given your previous files (bracelets, paracord projects, knot guides), this diagram could be one of the following:

Project TypeHow the Measurements Apply
Multi-section braceletA 14cm main body + 2cm loop + 15cm total length
Watch band6cm for the watch face area, 14cm for the strap
Bag handleTwo 15cm sections with a 6cm center grip
Keychain or lanyard14–15cm total length with 2cm loop at the end
Adjustable necklaceA 14cm fixed section + 15cm adjustable part

Full Understanding: How to Interpret the Numbers

Scenario 1: Bracelet with Loop Closure

MeasurementMeaning
14cm (A)Main knotted body of the bracelet
2cmThe loop (at one end) that the clasp or knot passes through
15cm (B)Total length including the loop (14 + 1? or 14 + 2? = 16, so careful)

If A = 14cm and the loop is 2cm, total could be 16cm. But B is labeled 15cm. This suggests:

  • A and B are different sections, not added together
  • Or B is the other end of the same bracelet

Scenario 2: Two-Part Project (e.g., Bag or Belt)

SectionLengthPurpose
A14cmFront panel or main decorative area
B15cmBack panel or adjustable strap
6cm6cmCenter connector or width
2cm2cmFold-over seam or fringe length

Scenario 3: Jig or Template for Tying

In macrame, you often create a tying jig (as in your LIND-Z pattern). This diagram could be the blueprint for a jig:

MeasurementJig Use
6cmDistance between two pegs for a small loop
14cmMain peg-to-peg distance for the bracelet body
15cmMaximum working length (including slack)
2cmExtra space for tightening

How-To Guide: Using This Diagram for a Purple Macrame Bracelet

Let me assume this diagram is for a two-section bracelet with a loop closure — a common project type that fits your artisanal purple theme.

Step 1 — Determine the Project

Based on the numbers, you are making:

  • A main body (14cm long)
  • A loop end (2cm diameter or length)
  • Total finished length approximately 15–16cm (suitable for a small to medium wrist, or an anklet)

Step 2 — Gather Materials

MaterialSpecification
Purple macrame cord2–3mm thickness
Length neededApprox. wrist size × 1.5 to 2 (e.g., 16cm wrist → 24–32cm of cord per strand)
Number of strandsDepends on pattern; typical: 4 to 8 strands

Step 3 — Create the A Section (14cm)

Using your preferred knot (square knot, cobra, or shark jaw):

  • Tie a knotted section exactly 14cm in length
  • This becomes the main decorative body of the bracelet

Step 4 — Create the B Section (15cm)

The B section may be:

  • Option 1: The other half of the bracelet (e.g., the back side or the adjustable tail)
  • Option 2: A second identical panel that will be joined to the first

If B = 15cm and A = 14cm, the B section is 1cm longer — possibly for an adjustable sliding knot.

Step 5 — Add the 2cm Loop

At one end of the A section, create a 2cm loop:

  • Fold the cords back and tie a knot
  • The loop should be large enough to pass a button or diamond knot through

Step 6 — Add the 6cm Element

The 6cm measurement could be:

  • A center decorative panel (e.g., a monkey’s fist or Pan Chang knot that is 6cm in circumference)
  • The width of the bracelet (if it is a wide cuff)
  • A separate small section (like a connector between A and B)

If it is a width measurement, your purple bracelet should be 6cm wide at its widest point.

Step 7 — Assemble

Follow the diagram’s layout:

  1. Start with the 2cm loop
  2. Then tie the 14cm A section
  3. Add the 6cm center element (if separate)
  4. Finish with the 15cm B section

Step 8 — Final Adjustments

Measure the finished project. Adjust knot tension so the sections match the diagram’s dimensions exactly.


Common Mistakes & Fixes

MistakeCauseFix
Sections don’t match diagramKnot tension inconsistentUse a ruler as you tie; check every 2cm
2cm loop too small/bigGuessed instead of measuredUse a 2cm-wide template (e.g., a coin) to form the loop
6cm width too wide for wristMisinterpreted measurement6cm is very wide for a bracelet; consider this might be a bag handle instead
A and B sections reverseMislabeled which end is whichMark A and B on your project with tape

Connecting to Your Previous Patterns

PatternHow No.1229 Could Be Used
Square knot braceletA = 14cm of square knots, B = 15cm of half-knots
Shark jaw boneA = 14cm of shark jaw, B = 15cm of cobra finish
LIND-ZA = 14cm of dense Z-weave, 2cm loop
Pan Chang knotPlace a 6cm Pan Chang knot in the center
Monkey’s fistUse the 6cm measurement for the fist’s diameter

Sample Project: Purple Artisanal Bracelet Using No.1229

Design:

  • 2cm loop: Deep purple cord, single overhand knot
  • 14cm A section: LIND-Z weave (dense diagonal) in light and dark purple
  • 6cm center: Pan Chang knot in medium purple (approximately 6cm wide after tightening)
  • 15cm B section: Shark jaw bone weave in lavender and violet
  • Closure: Diamond lanyard knot (as in the shark jaw guide) that passes through the 2cm loop

Total finished length: Approximately 31cm (too long for a wrist — so this may actually be a lanyard or necklace)

Given the total of A+B (14+15=29cm) plus the loop and center, this project is likely a long lanyard, sunglass strap, or small bag handle, not a standard bracelet.


Final Pro Tip: Always Verify the Project Type

The diagram No.1229 does not specify what you are making. Before cutting cord:

  1. Check if the original source (book, magazine, or website) had a title or photo
  2. If 14cm + 15cm = 29cm is longer than your wrist (typically 15–20cm), then this is not a bracelet — it is a lanyard, belt, or strap
  3. Adjust the measurements proportionally for a bracelet: scale down by dividing all numbers by 2 (e.g., 7cm A, 7.5cm B, 3cm center, 1cm loop)

Summary: What No.1229 Teaches You

LessonTakeaway
Patterns use letters (A, B) to label sectionsEach section may have a different knot or color
Small measurements (2cm) are usually loops or marginsThese are critical for closures and fit
Center measurements (6cm) are often focal pointsIdeal for decorative knots like Pan Chang or monkey’s fist
Always verify total length before starting29cm is a lanyard, not a bracelet