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How
to make the Dragon Scale Pattern
By Frank Hiemstra
Dragon
Scale is an interesting pattern
that looks, oddly enough,
like the scales of a dragon when
completed. It is a little tricky
to
get started, but gets easier once
it is going.
For
this weave to work, you will need
two different sizes of rings.
The smaller diameter of ring should
just be able to fit through the
larger rings. Ideally, the smaller
ring should be a little bigger
than
the ones pictured here to work
right. I have used a slightly
smaller ring
here to better show the difference
between the two ring sizes in
the weave.

Start
with a simple chain of alternating
small and large rings.
Place
a closed large ring over the small
ring, and straddling the two large
rings below.

Loop
and close a large ring through
the small ring so that it is pulled
up
through the closed ring that we
just laid down. This will
anchor the ring that we just laid
on top.

Place
another closed large ring down
over the next small ring. Thread
another
large ring through the first and
second small rings and close.
Continue until the row is complete.

You
should now have a strip of mail
that is three layers of large
rings deep.
Place a small ring through the
first two large rings of the second
layer. This
ring should stick up through the
large ring on the top layer. I
have colored
this ring so you can see it in
there. Care must be taken that
this small ring
stays behind the other small rings.
This "stepping-back"
of the small rings is
what allows the mail to hang in
the scale pattern. I find it easiest
to push the
top layer out of the way, close
the small ring through the large
rings on the second
layer, then push it up through
the top layer.

Take
a large ring and thread it through
the small ring you just put in.
This will
keep the small ring from being
pulled back down through the weave.
In this picture
you can also see the consequences
of using a small ring that is
too small. The small
ring has worked its way forward
of the one below it on the left
side. This needs to
be corrected by moving the ring
to sit behind the lower one for
the pattern to sit
straight. This problem can be
avoided by using a small ring
that
just barely fits inside the large
ring

Take
a small ring and place it through
the second and third ring of the
second
layer. Poke it up through the
large ring of the third layer.
Take another large
ring and thread it through this
ring and the small ring you put
in before it.
Continue in this manner until
this row is complete.

The
weave is continued like this until
it is the size that you wish.
The
important things to remember are
that the smaller rings should
just fit through
the large rings, and to keep the
small rings one behind the other
in a step pattern as the weave
gets larger.

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