Fig. 72.
[Fig. 69] illustrates the setting of a figure in “plain.” The space allowed for one repeat (outline of the square) is shown divided horizontally and vertically into two equal parts each way. [See dotted lines a, b, and c, d, thus giving the centre for the square at S.] The design contains two circles in its repeat; one of these circles is shown with its centre at S, and the other circle is illustrated divided into four quarters, as shown in the four corners of the square.
[Fig. 70] represents another “plain” setting, but the figure employed, a half-moon with a small circle near it, is set in two directions.
[Fig. 71] illustrates a design having in its repeat two different figures, each set by itself in “plain.” A third figure, ring e, f, g, h, is used four times to break the general prominence of the effect.
Diagram for Fig. 72.
[Fig. 72] shows the setting of a figure in a design similar to a “four-harness broken twill.”
[Fig. 73] shows a combination of one figure set in four-harness broken twill style, the other set in plain.