Help your loops behave in an orderly fashion
When I began rug hooking many years ago, I was struck by the beauty of how the repetitive rows of wide-cut loops provided such a strong directional quality to the overall composition of a rug. It gave rugs movement and vibrancy as rows of background echoed motifs or as long radially placed rows accentuated the sharp points of a star. As I hooked more and more, I also became more sensitive (some say neurotic!) about preserving this important directional quality in all areas of my rugs.
Early on, I was told to turn a wide-cut loop sideways to make it fit into narrow spaces, and this trick served me well in my earlier rugs. But the more I hooked and improved my technique, the more my frustration grew at having to squeeze a too-wide loop into a narrowing space. So, in my neurotic determination to preserve a continuity of loop direction and avoid a cramming approach to hooking, I realized that the only way I was going to avoid these uneven spaces was to hook a striped rug—and really, how many striped rugs would I want to hook anyway?

Here's an example of tapering a measured strip on both ends to fill a creascent shipped area.
To read more about the tapered wide-cut strip from Bea , please see the January/February 2012 issue of Rug Hooking magazine. To purchase a copy of this issue, please click here or to subscribe to Rug Hooking, click subscribe.


Lady in Water by Betsy Archer