Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
As the double overhand knot, it neither slips nor turns around.
The cinquefoil is the closed version of the double overhand knot.
It adds an extra twist when tying the first throw, forming a double overhand knot.
The strangle knot is a rearranged double overhand knot made around an object.
The double overhand knot is simply a logical extension of the regular overhand knot, made with one additional pass.
The two double overhand knots are left separated, and in this way the length of the necklace can be adjusted without breaking or untying the strand.
This knot is actually a rearranged double overhand knot and makes up each half of the double fisherman's knot.
The knot is formed by tying a double overhand knot, in its strangle knot form, with each end around the opposite line's standing part.
On a rope halter, the fiador knot is made from one continuous piece of rope, and is, along with a series of double overhand knots, one of two types of knots that comprise most rope halters.
For example, many knots "spill" or pull through, particularly if they are not "backed up," usually with a single or double overhand knot to make sure the end of the rope doesn't make its way through the main knot, causing all strength to be lost.