Here are some further thoughts on these extremely easy one-step disk braids I've been making lately (the 7-strand fill-the gap and others in the Braid Society handouts, the 4X+1 braids I recently did, etc.). I'm trying to keep track of my thoughts and interesting things I've found so I don't forget. Not all of these thoughts will end up being useful, correct, etc. And yeah, I'm probably gonna use disk and disc somewhat interchangeably.
I went looking in Noemi Speiser's Manual of Braiding to see if I could find something to match what I've been doing.
I'm not sure, because Noemi Speiser is a braiding master and I am a wee grasshopper.
But I think these braids are described as Tubular Braids, and in particular, as a subhead under "18C Tubular Linking", namely "18C.3. Three or More Span Floats." The little diagram shown as 18*26(d) sure looks like the kind of thing that we're doing here, though with different numbers than I've been using so far.
I looked at Ashley's Book of Knots and some of the sections on sinnets and other decorative knots, but I don't yet see the braids I'm doing.
If this is actually what these braids are doing, then the number of strands and number of strands jumped over generalize quite nicely, as long as one jumps a number of other threads without a common denominator. In other words, every strand needs to move/jump before we get back to the original thread, which is very much like Spirograph patterns. Or one could think about the holes moving instead of the strands, especially for fill-the-gap braids as opposed to the multiple-plus-extra braid. (Holes and their migrations are a concept that is useful in semiconductor physics and other materials science applications and theories.)
Speiser's version of that is "Note that the total number of threads has a certain relationship with the number skipped between each linking. If the pattern is not planned appropriately, you will be perplexed to find some threads floating on the surface, which are not engaged in the linkings at all."
Hmm, that implies some design possibilities, doesn't it? Threads don't have to engage at all and can float, and perhaps one can switch them in and out of the braiding for interesting effects. Or add beads and baubles. Or something. Also, all of these braids can be done around a core, and if the core consists of a bundle of threads, one can switch core threads in and out, as we do with Andean sling braiding techniques.
And, speaking of Andean sling braiding, there are examples of slings with what Adele Cahlender calls "spiral interlinking" around a core, complete with color substitutions. She shows it as the two-span float method described by Noemi Speiser as "18C.1. Two Span Floats" and "18C.2. Substituting Threads of Contrasting Colour", where Speiser specifically mentions Andean sling braiding.
The braids I've been doing are easy one-step braids where it's very hard to lose your place. So... to make a more general braid, one should be able to arrange the strands in a way that makes it easy to repeat one movement over and over, that can be identified without trouble, so that the braid can be picked up and put down easily without having to keep track of where you were. I think these are a lot of fun which is why I'm sort of exploring them and thinking about teaching them, including the 7-strand Fill the Gap braid but not including the types of braids which combine moves and/or have groups of strands that don't interact with each other such as kongo gumi or the Andean square braids.
I'm going to go back through Ashley's Book of Knots again. Also, the braid concepts that are being generalized to yarn/thread disk-braiding seem to be coming from the straw-plaiting community. But google searching sucks and I can't find sites that discuss more than simple 3-strand and 7-strand plaits. Harumph. I know they've gotta be out there whether online or in books.
And aha! I've found a few! The secret term seems to be "spiral plait". Here's the 5-strand one that matches the 5-strand disk braid I'm doing: https://www.strawcraftsmen.co.uk/project06.php and here's a link to another that has spiral plaits: https://carrickseeds.ca/articles-resources/ornamental-straw-work/. Plus I found a few links to videos. Cool, now that I know, I can hopefully find more.
The spiral interlinking thing also seems to be related to some of the basketry I've seen but I don't want to get into that just yet.
This gives me more ideas to play with though some will be on hold for a while.





