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Posted: Thu 20. Jul 2017, 21:37
by Rachel McCollough
Gio, thank you, I appreciate your words very much! Now if I could accomplish that with a heel knot ;)

Posted: Sat 22. Jul 2017, 15:01
by Matt Henderson
Definitely classy, Rach, and I'm forever impressed at how perfect your handles are just from rasping and sanding by hand.

Posted: Sat 22. Jul 2017, 18:50
by Rachel McCollough
Thank you very much, Matt, I appreciate it.

Posted: Sat 22. Jul 2017, 21:04
by Giovanni Celeste
Rachel McCollough wrote:Now if I could accomplish that with a heel knot ;)
:-) :-) :-)

Posted: Sat 22. Jul 2017, 21:54
by Sven van Leeuwen
That first part of plaiting is truly beautifull, does that style have a name or did you come up with it yourself?
Anyway, it works, it makes the whip stand out. And the handle... wow.
Thanks for sharing.

Sven

Posted: Sat 22. Jul 2017, 22:41
by Rachel McCollough
Thank you very much, Sven! It is a 16 plait Bird's Eye plait. There is a 12 plait Bird's eye which is a little simpler. Once you learn to keep it straight I think its possible to plait almost anything.

Posted: Sun 23. Jul 2017, 22:27
by Sven van Leeuwen
A bird's eye plait. I'll have to remember that one.

Sven

Posted: Tue 25. Jul 2017, 21:45
by Fritz Ehlers
I love this work. 16 plait makes for a beefy whip.
Your work looks reall good Rachel, well done

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 00:22
by Rachel McCollough
Fritz, thank you very much, I really appreciate it!


Here's the finished whip:

Image

Image

Image

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 00:30
by Ron May
Rachel, another simple but very sharp looking whip.
Do you find the birds eye at the transition helps firm it up?
How does it crack?

Ron

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 00:54
by Rachel McCollough
Thanks Ron, birds eye will make it a little more springy and can firm it a little, but that all depends on the inside of the whip, how it is made. Mine are quite dense so it won't add a lot of change to it necessarily- also because I rotate my bellies, it won't affect it as much.
It flies straight and goes bam with little effort :)

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 02:17
by Tyler Blake
That's really splendid Rachel :)

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 03:03
by Jessie Edwards
I envy your mastery of the birdseye :). Beautiful, as usual Whippy sister

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 07:38
by Robert Gage
Ron, as the owner of Amper Style 002, I can tell you how it cracks: it's fabulous! I was using mine yesterday, and was astonished - yet again - at how good it is! :)

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 13:41
by Rachel McCollough
Tyler, thank you very much!

WS you can do it. Its just practice. I have no doubt! Thank you very much :)

Oh wow Mr. Robert, thank you :)

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 13:43
by Ethan Mitchell
Rachel McCollough wrote:Thanks Ron, birds eye will make it a little more springy and can firm it a little, but that all depends on the inside of the whip, how it is made. Mine are quite dense so it won't add a lot of change to it necessarily- also because I rotate my bellies, it won't affect it as much.
It flies straight and goes bam with little effort :)
Rachel,
I love you style, plain with a little bit of flair.
I have read about how most of the other members line up their bellies. But when you said you rotate your bellies you caught my interest. Could you elaborate on it? Right now I have not even given thought to lining up my bellies, or rotating them for that matter.

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 14:12
by Brandon "Sparky" Lam
Looks like awesome clean work Rachel! Your birds eyes are clean as all heck!

May I ask, how do you take your photos? I'm having a huge amount of trouble with taking photos of black cord myself :O

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 15:14
by Rachel McCollough
Thanks Brandon! Pics are just with my cell outside early morning or late evening but not deep shade or direct sun. That's pretty much it!

Ethan thanks, yes most plait down then roll and bind, plait right over that layer the same way. You want to line up those seams. If you dont the flight path of the whip will be off or erratic. Think of it as a backbone.

I turn my whip around 180 degrees to plait the next layer. For my plaiting there's too much curve if I don't. Still, line up those bellies every time.

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 22:00
by Ethan Mitchell
Ok, I think I understand how that would improve the performance of the whip.
Thanks Rachel!

Posted: Wed 26. Jul 2017, 23:18
by Rachel McCollough
You're welcome!