:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Macrame is not complicated. It is one knot repeated with intention. :INFO What You Actually Need to Know First Macrame is the art of knotting cord into textile structures. Every macrame project — from simple wall hangings to complex plant hangers — is built from a handful of basic knots: the lark's head, the square knot, and the spiral or half-square knot. A beginner wall hanging uses all three. The most common mistake is buying cord that is too thin — 3mm to 5mm single-strand or 3-ply cotton cord is the right starting point. :COUNTER.half 4x the Finished Length | :COUNTER.half 3 to 5 mm :PATH Mount Cords with Lark's Head Hitches Fold each cord in half and loop onto the dowel with a lark's head knot. | :INFO Mount Cords with Lark's Head Hitches Cut your cords to the working length (4x desired finished length). Fold each cord in half. Place the folded loop over the top of the dowel, then pull the two tails through the loop and tighten. This is a lark's head hitch. Mount as many cords as your design requires — a standard 12-inch wide hanging uses 16 to 20 cords (8 to 10 folds). :PATH Tie Square Knots Group cords into sets of 4 and tie square knots across the row. | :INFO Tie Square Knots Take a group of 4 cords. The 2 center cords are passive filler; the outer 2 cords do the knotting. Take the right outer cord over the fillers and under the left. Take the left outer cord under the fillers and through the loop on the right side. Pull tight. This is a half square knot. Mirror the action to complete the full square knot. Consistent tension produces consistent knot size. :PATH Create Alternating Rows Offset the groupings in the second row to create a net pattern. | :INFO Create Alternating Rows For the second row, skip the first 2 cords. Group the next 4 cords (2 from the first group on the left, 2 from the group on the right). Tie a square knot. Continue across. This offset creates the classic alternating square knot pattern — the most recognizable macrame texture. Adjust spacing between rows to control the openness of the weave. :PATH Finish the Fringe Trim cords at an angle or in a V-shape and brush out for a soft fringe. | :INFO Finish the Fringe Cut the hanging cords to your desired fringe length — straight across, angled, or in a V or arc. For a brushed fringe, unravel the plied cords into individual fibers and brush vigorously with a stiff wire pet brush (a slicker brush). Work in sections. Trim the brushed fringe to even it after brushing. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] 3mm to 5mm single-strand or 3-ply cotton cord [ ] Wooden dowel or driftwood piece [ ] Scissors — sharp ones, not kitchen scissors [ ] Stiff wire brush (slicker brush) for fringe [ ] Tape measure :NOTE Tension Is the Entire Skill Loose knots create a sloppy, uneven hanging. Tight, consistent tension on every knot produces clean lines and defined texture. After tying each square knot, pull both knotting cords firmly and evenly before moving on. Check row spacing with a ruler if your spacing is drifting. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Knot by knot it becomes something. That is the only explanation needed. :LINK https://www.99knots.com/macrame-for-beginners/ 99 Knots — Macrame for Beginners: Complete Pattern Guide