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Pinstripes Pattern Type
All
of our patterns start with three somewhat dark base
colors and a fourth color which is used to lighten
and brighten the other three. This fourth color is
usually White, but we sometimes also use Tan, Yellow
or Gray for other interesting effects. The finished
product is called a "cane" and can be compared
to a roll of slice-and-bake cookie dough where the
pattern is visible in any cross-section.
The PINSTRIPE cane begins as a Skinner blend between two lightened base colors, rolled up, squished, and flattened into a plug about earlobe thickness. A thin sheet of the other base color (also lightened but not as much) is added and the whole thing is run through the pasta machine on a thick setting. The resulting strip is halved and stacked, halved and stacked again until there are a number of stripes.
I learned this cane from Donna Kato who uses it on her squiggle beads.
See
items made with these patterns
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