Inverted Round

CGI Tutorial Inverted Round

Author's Note
I wanted to contribute my tutorials to Chainmaillers.com to help ensure that the entire chainmaille community has access to them. The tutorials are presented here with the same images and text from my old site CGMaille. I hope they continue to help inspire you to learn and create many amazing pieces!
-Phong


Weave Background
Inverted Round is similar to Roundmaille, but the rings are flipped up in IR, rather than alternating up/down as in Roundmaille. Inverted Round by itself isn't terribly stable, and the cages can collapse in, leading to a messy appearance. The cages can have rings put inside them for stability and aesthetics, giving Captive Inverted Round.

Aspect Ratio & Ring Sizes
Inverted Round can be made with rings around 4.2 and up. 20awg 1/8", 18swg 3/16" and 16swg 1/4" rings will work. Raising the inner diameter will give a larger, looser chain.

Metric sizes - approximately 0.8mm wire/3mm ID; 1.2mm wire/4.8mm ID; 1.5mm wire/6.4mm ID.

Tutorial Color Scheme
All rings are steel.


Step 1: Close 4 rings and put them on a fifth. Lay it so that 2 closed rings are on either side.

01.jpg


Step 2: Close 2 rings and put them on an open ring. Connect the open ring to 2 of the closed rings from the previous step. They should now make a 2-1-2-1-2 chain.

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Step 3: Bring the two ends around and connect them with a single ring. They should now make a loop, with the horizontal rings in two tiers.

03.jpg


Step 4: Flip the bottom-tier rings down, and the top-tier rings up so it makes a tube shape. You now have 3 'cages' that form the basic units of IR. Now you'll just make more cages.
Note: Right now it's not very stable, so try to keep it between your fingers for the next few steps. You can put an extra ring, a piece of wire or a twisty tie through the bottom cage to keep it in place.

04.jpg


Step 5: Pass an open ring though two adjacent rings in the top cage.

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Step 6: Pass an open ring through two more adjacent rings in the top cage. Make sure it doesn't go through the ring you added in the previous step.

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Step 7: Pass an open ring through the remaining two rings. Again, make sure this ring doesn't go through either of the rings you added in the two previous steps. This completes the next cage.

07.jpg


Step 8: Repeat Step 5 with two adjacent rings from the top-most cage.

08.jpg


Step 9: And keep going with the next ring, making sure not to pass the ring through the ring you just added.

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Step 10: And so on to complete the next cage.

10.jpg


Step 11: Repeat Steps 8-10 until the chain is the desired length.

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Phong
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