velvetpage: (hooker)
velvetpage ([personal profile] velvetpage) wrote2007-01-08 12:35 pm
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This is fabulous.

It makes me want to go back to school and learn more math. I gotta tell ya, I don't think I've ever said that before.

Knit theory, only it's really crochet

Yoinked from [livejournal.com profile] wyldraven

Edit: I just read the rest of the article, and I'm amazed at how a journalist who appears to have a working knowledge of high-level math can't seem to grasp the difference between knitting and crocheting. She's not knitting; indeed, knitting wouldn't work at all for this project. She's crocheting, and doing something that anyone who has ever worked a ruffle knows how to do: she increasing the number of stitches exponentially each row, so she starts with a straight line of, say, eight chain stitches, and four rows later has 64 stitches that ruffle. This is the basis for any lacework pattern that doesn't need to lay flat, and I've done it dozens of times.

I've crocheted the hyperbolic plane! Cool!
althea_valara: Icon captioned "Geek". (geek)

[personal profile] althea_valara 2007-01-08 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
:) I've read that article previously, but it was good to read it again. I may need to see about subscribing to Discover. It's one of the few magazines that I read cover to cover.

[identity profile] dornbeast.livejournal.com 2007-01-08 06:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm amazed at how a journalist who appears to have a working knowledge of high-level math can't seem to grasp the difference between knitting and crocheting.

There's a mental chasm between high-level math and knitting/crocheting. I'm not sure this is a good thing; this is the second time I've heard of a mathematician meeting with knitting and realizing that there's points of similarity. (The first one was in one of Richard Feynman's books.)

Math can be handy...

[identity profile] gracevlikevrain.livejournal.com 2007-01-08 06:28 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL...I just had to find the formula to figure out the radius of a circle if you only know the circumference when I was making gift bags...so maybe all those math classes I sat through in high school are useful in every day life afterall. =)

[identity profile] lovmelovmycats.livejournal.com 2007-01-08 06:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Very cool article! I'm gonna email the link to my sister, who crochets.

[identity profile] hendrikboom.livejournal.com 2007-01-09 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I once knitted a moebius strip using a flexible circular knitting needle that went around the edge (twice around the loop, of course. Casting on took some real inspiration, and the first few rows were really tight. I had to use a crochet needle to move the loops from one end of the needle to the other. But after that it went more easily, and by about row three (or was it six?) I could assume a more normal knitting procedure.

After that I did another by crocheting. Much easier.

Once, when I was about ten, I had a flexible snap-together plastic kind of building thing -- called flex-something -- I forget just what. I decided to see what I could get by making an array of squares and putting one to many at each corner. It got quite messy, and I discovered I had some king of primordial fear of the kind of shape I was building, and quickly took it apart before I could see its full majesty.

I wonder there that primordial fear could possibly have come from. Did our ancestors encounter really dangerous hyperbolic planes in our remote past? Did I encounter them as a toddler?