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Interesting and Fun Facts about Scoubidous

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Interesting and Fun Facts about Scoubidous Google Doodle

Today’s Google handcrafted Doodle celebrates scoubidous, a French thread knotting craft that originated in the 1950s and experienced a global revival in the 2000s. This Google Doodle honors scoubidous – vibrantly colored threads that may be tied together to create complicated crafts and designs. On September 12, 2015, people in La-Chapelle-Saint-Ursin, France set the Guinness World Record for the longest scoubidou.

Scoubidou first became popular in France in the latter half of the 1950s. Utilizing generationally taught lanyard weaving strategies, families provided their kids with thin rope straps to make colorful patterns and knots.

15 Interesting Facts about Scoubidous

  1. Scoubidou (Craftlace, scoobies, lanyard, gimp, or boondoggle) is a material utilized in knotting craft.
  2. It originated in France, where it became a fad in the late 1950s and has remained famous.
  3. It is named after the 1958 song of a similar name by the French singer Sacha Distel.
  4. Scoubidou returned to the fashion industry in several countries in 2004 and 2005.
  5. It uses commercially supplied plastic strips or tubes.
  6. The most broadly recognized kind of thread used for the craft is flat and comes in many colors, sometimes called “lanyard” or “gimp string,” frequently depending upon region.
  7. One more kind of scoubidou thread is flexible, round, and hollow plasticized PVC tubes ordinarily around 80 centimeters long. They are sold in different varieties, sizes, and types, and are used to make items by restricting them along with knots.
  8. By virtue of their elasticity and hollow cross-section — which empowers them to fall and distort when pulled — they form tight and stable knots. Key chains, friendship bands, and different trinkets are most commonly woven, albeit more complicated shapes and figures can likewise be made.
  9. Most of the knots used in scoubidou were at that point used in bast fiber, while the creations possible with scoubidou resemble traditional corn dollies and macrame.
  10. Creations, for example, dragons, Eiffel towers, bridges, and birds can be made by putting wires inside the stitch to keep it stable, and to empower bending the stitch and keeping it twisted.
  11. The most well-known knot for making keychains is the square stitch, which is otherwise called a box stitch. It utilizes two gimp threads.
  12. Quite a few strands can be used in numerous scoubidou stitches, which are commonly performed with few strands. The Super-16 is an enormous scoubidou comprising sixteen strands woven together. The Super-16 can measure up to the Square stitch however on a lot bigger scale.
  13. Scoubidou kept up with its popularity however saw an outstanding recovery in the United Kingdom during the mid-2000s. While the most iconic threads are flat and colorful, others are round and hollow.
  14. Today, individuals utilize this knotting craft to make all that from key chains to friendship bands.
  15. A few countries have promoted scoubidou parties — where children meet up to try different things with new thread designs!
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