. Memoirs of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History. Natural history; Ethnology. Hanai K^ Z, J/. ^^c is looped aty leaving a slack at/, the loops^-andy bound together by one turn and the binding continued around the whole as with the pun. Hanai K (Figs. 146 and 105 ^).-This follows J as far as the loop h, which does not encircle x and a (Diag. r, Fig. 146). Then two half hitches are slipped over g and drawn tight, a loop left and two more half hitches added. Diagrams i and 2 were drawn from the reverse side, and Diagram 3 from the obverse. As^^ passes be-


. Memoirs of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnology and Natural History. Natural history; Ethnology. Hanai K^ Z, J/. ^^c is looped aty leaving a slack at/, the loops^-andy bound together by one turn and the binding continued around the whole as with the pun. Hanai K (Figs. 146 and 105 ^).-This follows J as far as the loop h, which does not encircle x and a (Diag. r, Fig. 146). Then two half hitches are slipped over g and drawn tight, a loop left and two more half hitches added. Diagrams i and 2 were drawn from the reverse side, and Diagram 3 from the obverse. As^^ passes be- tween b and d, one of the loops on g is run around d. To complete the knot, // is laid on r, and g and another loopy added, when the whole is bound together in the usual way with the slack /. In this hanai (see Fig. 105 d, with"*^ the koko inverted), the knots in the succeeding row are placed diredlly in front of those of the previous one, while the loops h and d of one pun are not separated as in all the other hanai. Hanai L (Fig. 147). —This hanai shown in the ^iG. 123. piKo c. figure in suspended position was construAed so as to leave four circular spaces reaching from top to bottom. The pillars of the body were made with the pun of Hanai D very closely knitted and the ends of the rows finished with the pun of Hanai G. Each pillar was completed before the next was begun. The rows are fourteen puu wide at the piko, decreasing to three at the middle and increasing to thirteen at the outer edge. As the work proceeded, the ends of the rows were embroidered with two additional puu as in Hanai G on one side and one puu on the other, and a row of such puu was attached to the connedling cords of the last row on the pillar. The cord is then at the outer edge of the hanai and is brought to the piko by intertwining with the puu on the side of the pillar last mentioned, and an additional puu knitted to the end of each row. The last pillar being made, a row of simple puu is run ar


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, books, booksubjectnaturalhistory