Forms oj Haiiai. 



123 



lip by d and c. In knitting the succeeding row of the hanai, the nearest loops of adja- 

 cent pun of the first row are placed together and bound by the outer knots. Sometimes 

 when the mesh of the hanai is intended to be large, two loops of the piko are combined 

 in one pun. And occasionally, but only with the closelj- knitted koko of coir, the 

 hanai commences with but few pun near the piko. Fig. 133, and the number is 

 doubled by using each loop of the pun of the inner row as a base for that in the 



outer. In the figure the num- 

 y ji ^ A ber of pun in the second, third 

 and sixth rows have been suc- 

 cessively doubled. 



The work of the knitted 

 koko was direAed either con- 

 tinually to the right, or to the 

 left, or had the alternating rows 

 in each direAion ; there seems 

 to have been no set rule, but 

 one circuit was always completed 

 before the next began, in which 

 respect it differed from that in 

 the netting. The knitted knot 

 can at once be detedled by the 

 cord hanging from and connect- 

 ing the bases of each pun (see 

 a in Figs. 108 and 137). When 

 one row was finished, the ball 

 cord b^ //, Fig. 108, was carried 

 up with the loop of the last knot 

 to begin the row above. 

 Hanai E (Figs. 138, 104 a^ and 105 a). — This is the same as Hanai D, except 

 that the outer loops are interlaced before the ends are bound together with the pun. 



Hanai F (Figs. 139 and 115). — Before completing the pun, the ball cord c, 

 Fig. 139, is looped _^- through the slack r, which is taken in as usual. Then round the 

 bends of ^- the ball cord // is very tightly wound, finishing at /', Diagram 2. Then the 

 bight of ^'' is placed on that of .r and the loop / on the ball cord run through .r and^, 

 after which the pun is repeated. A koko of this st3'le, uuicpie in the colledlion, is 

 illustrated in Fig. 115 in its suspended position. 



FIG. 121. I'IKO F. UEVEUSE. 



