String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands
At some time in your youth, no doubt, you took a loop of string and made a "cat's-cradle," a "Jacob's ladder," or some other type of figure by looping and crossing the string between the fingers. But perhaps you were not aware that this is actually an ancient form of amusement, that it is practiced in all parts of the globe, and is especially popular among primitive tribes. And you probably didn't realize what a great variety of figures can be formed by a single loop of string.
This book describes, in a simple and easy-to-follow manner, how to make no less than 107 different string figures, just as they are made in their land of origin. It is the only book on the subject in English that gives a thorough and readily understandable treatment, so that a beginner can follow the steps and make the figures without the help of a teacher. The figures offer an excellent means for developing manual dexterity and coordination between brain and hand, and present challenge to personal inventiveness, too, since they are capable of infinite variations. These games are fun for people of all ages: intelligent children can do them easily, and adults find great enjoyment in them. Two people can play the string games together, one using his left and the other his right; and many of the games even require four hands.
The description of each figure and the process of making it is accompanied by several simply drawn sketches that show each distinct step as it would be viewed by the person making the figure. The illustrator has taken great care to show in each sketch all the loops, all the intertwinings as they should appear at each stage in the process, so that there is no reason for anyone to have undue difficulty in making any of the figures.
Besides those who simply want to use the book as a source of amusement, the book will be of great interest to anthropologists and collectors of string figures, since it greatly increases the knowledge of string games and their distribution around the world.
1115435910
String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands
At some time in your youth, no doubt, you took a loop of string and made a "cat's-cradle," a "Jacob's ladder," or some other type of figure by looping and crossing the string between the fingers. But perhaps you were not aware that this is actually an ancient form of amusement, that it is practiced in all parts of the globe, and is especially popular among primitive tribes. And you probably didn't realize what a great variety of figures can be formed by a single loop of string.
This book describes, in a simple and easy-to-follow manner, how to make no less than 107 different string figures, just as they are made in their land of origin. It is the only book on the subject in English that gives a thorough and readily understandable treatment, so that a beginner can follow the steps and make the figures without the help of a teacher. The figures offer an excellent means for developing manual dexterity and coordination between brain and hand, and present challenge to personal inventiveness, too, since they are capable of infinite variations. These games are fun for people of all ages: intelligent children can do them easily, and adults find great enjoyment in them. Two people can play the string games together, one using his left and the other his right; and many of the games even require four hands.
The description of each figure and the process of making it is accompanied by several simply drawn sketches that show each distinct step as it would be viewed by the person making the figure. The illustrator has taken great care to show in each sketch all the loops, all the intertwinings as they should appear at each stage in the process, so that there is no reason for anyone to have undue difficulty in making any of the figures.
Besides those who simply want to use the book as a source of amusement, the book will be of great interest to anthropologists and collectors of string figures, since it greatly increases the knowledge of string games and their distribution around the world.
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String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands

String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands

by Caroline F. Jayne
String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands

String Figures and How to Make Them: A Study Of Cats-Cradle In Many Lands

by Caroline F. Jayne

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Overview

At some time in your youth, no doubt, you took a loop of string and made a "cat's-cradle," a "Jacob's ladder," or some other type of figure by looping and crossing the string between the fingers. But perhaps you were not aware that this is actually an ancient form of amusement, that it is practiced in all parts of the globe, and is especially popular among primitive tribes. And you probably didn't realize what a great variety of figures can be formed by a single loop of string.
This book describes, in a simple and easy-to-follow manner, how to make no less than 107 different string figures, just as they are made in their land of origin. It is the only book on the subject in English that gives a thorough and readily understandable treatment, so that a beginner can follow the steps and make the figures without the help of a teacher. The figures offer an excellent means for developing manual dexterity and coordination between brain and hand, and present challenge to personal inventiveness, too, since they are capable of infinite variations. These games are fun for people of all ages: intelligent children can do them easily, and adults find great enjoyment in them. Two people can play the string games together, one using his left and the other his right; and many of the games even require four hands.
The description of each figure and the process of making it is accompanied by several simply drawn sketches that show each distinct step as it would be viewed by the person making the figure. The illustrator has taken great care to show in each sketch all the loops, all the intertwinings as they should appear at each stage in the process, so that there is no reason for anyone to have undue difficulty in making any of the figures.
Besides those who simply want to use the book as a source of amusement, the book will be of great interest to anthropologists and collectors of string figures, since it greatly increases the knowledge of string games and their distribution around the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780486201528
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication date: 06/01/1962
Series: Dover Brain Games & Puzzles
Pages: 448
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)
Age Range: 10 - 18 Years

Table of Contents

Introduction
I. Distribution of String Figures
Native Names
Methods First Recorded
Ethnological Value of String Games
Relations of Finished Patterns Made by Different Races
Relations of Native Methods
How String Figures are Made
Different Openings
Nomenclature Adopted
Typical Movements Described
Explanation of the Descriptions and the Drawings
II. "Opening Movements, Known as First Position and Opening A"
Figures Beginning with Opening A
An Apache Door
Fighting Head-Hunters
A Sunset
Osage Diamonds
Osage Two Diamonds
Dressing a Skin
A Fish-Speak
A Sea-Snake
A Kingfish
Bagobo Diamonds
Bagobo Two Diamonds
III. Figures Beginning with Opening A (Continued)
Many Stars
An Owl
A Second Owl
A Third Owl
Seven Bars
Two-Horned Star
Two Coyotes
Big Star
North Star
Carrying Wood
Owl's Net
Two Elks
A Rabbit
The Sun
IV. Figures Beginning with Opening A (Continued)
A Well
Fence Around a Well
A Crab
A Trigger Fish
Rattlesnake and a Boy
Two Skunks
Two Foxes
Two Squirrels
Leashing of Lochiel's Dogs
Two Hogans
A Cariboo
A Circle
Two Stars
Casting the Fish-Spear
An Arrow
A Porcupine
V. Figures Beginning with Opening A (Continued)
A Caroline Islands Catch
Circles and Triangles
Ten Men
A Variation of Ten Men
Caroline Islands Triangles
Carrying Money
House of the Blos-Bird
Three Stars
No Name
Coral
A Man
Two Chiefs
A Man and a Bed
A Palm Tree
A Canoe with Two Masts
A House
Figures Beginning with a Modification of Opening A—W—M
VI. Figures which Do Not Begin with Opening A
A Bow
Lightning
A Butterfly
A Worm
Twin Stars
A Lizard
Little Fishes
Storm Clouds
One Hogan
An Apache Teepee
Tallow Dips
One Chief
Caroline Islands Diamonds
A Turtle
Ten Times
VII. Figures which Do Not Begin with Opening A (Continued)
Pigmy Diamonds
A Mouth
Two Little Boys Running Away
A Little Fish that Hides in the Mud
A Little Boy Carrying Wood
A Second Worm
A Brush House
A Six-Pointed Star
The Breastbone and Ribs
A Bird's-Nest
Two Boys Fighting for an Arrow
Flint and Steel
The Real Cat's-Cradle
VIII. Tricks and Catches
A Torres Straits Lizard
Hanging
The Mouse
A Dravidian Trick
A Finger Catch
A Fly on the Nose
A Thumb Catch
Will You have a Yam?
Threading a Closed Loop
A Saw Mill
IX. A Few Eskimo and Indian Games from Alaska
Figures Known only from the Finished Patterns
Nauru Figures
Eskimo Figures
Hawaiian Figures
A Zuni Figure
Australian Figures
X. Geographical Distribution of String Figures g Figures
A Few Invented Figures
The Scarab
The Lozenge
The Square
Variation of Coral
Two Dolphins
Variation of the Crab
Second Variation of Ten Men
Bibliography
Index
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