Chinese button knot

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The Chinese button knot is essentially a lanyard knot. Two lines emerge next to each other from the knot: the beginning and the end. The knot has traditionally been used as a button on clothes in Asia.

The Chinese Button Knot is worn throughout China on underwear and night clothes. Buttons of this sort are more comfortable to lie on and to rest against compared to common bone and composition buttons, and they cannot be broken even by the laundry. A Chinese tailor ties the knot without guide, flat on his table. But one may be more quickly and easily tied in hand by a modification of the sailor’s method of tying his knife lanyard knot (#787). The two knots are tied alike, but they are worked differently.| Ashley, Clifford W. (1944). The Ashley Book of Knots, p.101.

Tying

Method1
The basic chinese button knot is usually tied with a carrick bend that attaches the two ends as a first step. This results then in a diamond knot where the loop part can be sized and used as a button hole, while the knot part can be used as a button.

Below is the description, and several video demonstration references:

Method

  • Take a piece of banding about 1 metre long, middle it, and lay it across the left hand as pictured.
  • Take the end from the back of the hand and make a right turn around the tip of the left thumb.
  • Bend the left thumb and hold the turn against the standing part of the cord.
  • Take the left end and tuck it to the right, under the first end and then to the left under the upper centre part of the knot.
  • The knot should now have a regular over-one-and under-one sequence throughout.
  • Keeping the knot in hand, tuck both ends under the rim and up through the centre compartment of the knot as pictured in the third diagram.
  • Remove the knot from the hand, turn it completely over, and allow the two ends to hang down between the two middle fingers of the left hand as drawn in the fifth diagram.
  • Work out the surplus material of the loop without distorting the knot and arrange it... The Ashley Book of Knots

Method 2
A Marlinspike hitch knot is the first step, and does not produce a lanyard loop that needs to be reduced when used as a button. This method provides just the button, a spherical basket weave knot, in the style of Turk's head knot.

Method 3
A third way to tie this knotstarts with two loops almost like tying the celtic button knot, except for the curvature change at the centre which results in the way the ends exit the knot; at opposite sides for celtic, at the same side here.


The resulting knot in both tying methods (slip-knot method and two-loops or whyknot method).

"The top centre part of the present knot has retreated from the surface. This should now be forcibly pricked to the surface and the surrounding parts tightened to hold it in place. This is the final form of the common chinese button knot. By counting it will be found that the knot has 9 surface parts."|The Ashley Book of Knots ... The Ashley Book of Knots, p.103.

Which triangular hole at the S formed/back bent top centre each end is tucked through in both tying methods makes a difference:

  • tucking through the one at near side of the centre as indicated by red lines in this image gives ABOK #600 the 8 part knot, of which the common chinese button knot is a version with a 9th surface part,
  • tucking through the one at opposite side as indicated by red lines in this image gives ABOK #787 the diamond knot but with a retreated loop.

Uses

  • Clothing buttons
  • Decorative stopper knot
  • Lanyard

See also