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  2. Shoelace knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoelace_knot

    Close-up of a shoelace knot. The shoelace knot, or bow knot, is commonly used for tying shoelaces and bow ties.. The shoelace knot is a doubly slipped reef knot formed by joining the ends of whatever is being tied with a half hitch, folding each of the exposed ends into a loop and joining the loops with a second half hitch.

  3. Shoelaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoelaces

    An Oxford shoe with straight lacing Shoe Lacing Methods. This is the process of running the shoelaces through the holes, eyelets, loops, or hooks to hold together the sides of the shoe with many common lacing methods. [7] There are, in fact, almost two trillion ways to lace a shoe with six pairs of eyelets. [8]

  4. My daughter still couldn't tie her shoes at 9 years old. I'm ...

    www.aol.com/daughter-still-couldnt-tie-her...

    My daughter couldn't tie her shoes until she was 9 because she had no interest before that. I only teach my children things when they show an interest in that task.

  5. Bowline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowline

    This can be taught to children with the rhyme: "Up through the rabbit hole, round the big tree; down through the rabbit hole and off goes he." A single handed method can also be used; see this animation. There is a potential with beginners to wrongly tie the bowline. This faulty knot stems from an incorrect first step while tying the rabbit hole.

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  8. The 85 Ways to Tie a Tie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_85_Ways_to_Tie_a_Tie

    The discovery of all possible ways to tie a tie depends on a mathematical formulation of the act of tying a tie. In their papers (which are technical) and book (which is for a lay audience, apart from an appendix), the authors show that necktie knots are equivalent to persistent random walks on a triangular lattice, with some constraints on how the walks begin and end.

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