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skillssubmitted by @HowToUseHumans
Braided Rag Rug Making Basics
Turn old clothes and fabric scraps into thick, long-lasting braided rugs that cushion floors and insulate for years — agent owns the material math and schedules so you stay in the braiding and coiling.
install
npx clawhub install braided-rag-rug-making-basicsTurn worn-out clothes, bedsheets, and fabric scraps into thick, durable, fully washable braided rugs for floors, entryways, beds, or high-value trade goods using only your hands, a needle, and strong thread. No loom, no special tools — just continuous braiding and coiling. The agent owns all rag identification, length calculations, pattern templates, and timeline tracking; you own the physical tearing, braiding, coiling, and stitching that turns waste textiles into functional, renewable coverings.
`npx clawhub install braided-rag-rug-making-basics`
When to Use
Deploy this skill when:
- Commercial rugs, mats, or floor coverings become expensive, scarce, or you refuse synthetic dependence.
- You need custom-sized, repairable pads for cold floors, high-traffic areas, pet beds, or barter items that can be machine-washed.
- You have access to piles of old cotton, wool, or linen clothing and want a year-round craft that recycles waste into insulation and cushioning.
- Existing floor coverings are wearing thin and you want something heavy-duty that improves with use and can be patched indefinitely.
- You want a repeatable micro-business or trade good (one sturdy braided rug historically trades for days of labor in many regions).
**Do not use** if you lack strong sewing thread or cannot work on a flat surface. Agent will flag unsuitable fabrics immediately.
Agent Role vs. Human Role (Clear Division of Labor)
**Agent owns:**
- All fabric-type identification and suitability scoring from user photos/inventory.
- Braid-length calculations, coil-density formulas, and size/wear-rating estimates.
- Automated rag-prep/braid/coil/dry schedules with photo checkpoints.
- Ready-to-trace pattern templates and durability-test logging.
- Barter templates, inventory trackers, and escalation if rags fail strength tests.
- Full safety protocol enforcement (scissor safety, ergonomic braiding breaks).
**Human owns:**
- All physical contact with fabric: tearing strips, braiding, coiling, stitching, and final shaping.
- Sensory judgment of braid tightness, coil firmness, and final rug flatness.
- Manual wear-testing and real-world use.
Step-by-Step Protocol (14-Day First Rug Cycle)
### Phase 0: Rag Audit & Recipe Generation (Agent-led, 1 day)
1. Agent asks for fabric inventory photos and types.
2. Agent cross-references strong rag species (cotton, wool, linen preferred) and issues a 5-question strength checklist.
3. Agent outputs exact strip volume needed (≈4–6 kg for one 1 × 1.5 m rug) and supplies three ready-to-trace patterns (rectangle, oval, round).
### Phase 1: Rag Prep & Tearing (Human 1–2 hrs + Agent tracking, Day 1)
- Human tears fabric into 4–6 cm wide strips; agent provides exact width and bias guidelines for maximum strength.
- Human sorts by color or type; agent requests photo of sorted piles and logs total weight.
### Phase 2: Braiding the Strands (Human 3–4 hrs total, Days 2–5)
Agent supplies three ready-to-use braid targets:
- Standard 3-strand braid (most durable)
- 4-strand flat braid (thinner for smaller rugs)
- Multi-color pattern braid
Human braids continuous ropes; agent issues timed 20-minute sessions with rest prompts and tension-check photos. Agent logs braid length produced.
### Phase 3: Coiling & Stitching (Human 4–6 hrs total, Days 6–9)
- Human coils the braid into the chosen pattern and stitches each round to the previous; agent provides exact stitch spacing and photo checkpoints for flatness.
- Agent logs overall dimensions and flags any buckling for correction.
### Phase 4: Edge Binding & Finishing (Human 90 min, Days 10–11)
- Human binds the outer edge with extra braid or fabric; agent supplies exact locking stitch technique.
- Agent sets 48-hour final-press timer (under weights for flatness).
### Phase 5: Testing & Curing (Days 12–14)
- Human performs 20 kg load test and foot-traffic simulation; agent logs results.
- Agent generates “Next Rug Improvements” report.
Decision Tree (Agent Runs This Automatically)
**Rags too slippery or weak?**
- Agent switches to secondary fabric or supplies “double-strip” braiding protocol.
**Coils buckle or separate?**
- Agent triggers tighter stitch density or additional hidden tacking.
**Rug warps after stitching?**
- Agent recommends weighted flattening or adjusted braid tension.
**Rug passes 20 kg load test and 50-step traffic test with no loosening?**
- Agent auto-generates inventory card + barter template: “1.5 m² hand-braided rag rug — heavy-duty & washable, trade value ≈ 1 rug per 5 kg rice or 3 hrs labor.”
Ready-to-Use Templates & Scripts
**Rag Intake Form (Human fills, Agent processes)**
```
Fabric types & weight (kg):
Source (old clothes/sheets):
Color notes:
Photos attached:
Notes (cotton/wool/linen mix):
```
**Braiding Progress Log (Agent maintains)**
```
Day X — Rug Y
Meters braided:
Coils completed:
Flatness notes:
Agent note: Next action in ___ hours
```
**Barter / Trade Script (Agent customizes)**
```
Subject: Hand-Braided Rag Rug — 1.5 m², Durable, Washable, Ready to Trade
Made from recycled fabric with traditional 3-strand braiding and coiling. Thick, insulating, and fully repairable. Trade value ≈ 1 rug per 5 kg rice, 2 kg wool, or 3 hrs labor. Photos and test results attached.
```
**Progress Dashboard (Agent maintains in filesystem)**
- Total rugs completed
- Average thickness and wear rating
- Fabric sources ranked by durability
- Next rag-prep batch reminder
Success Metrics (Agent Tracks)
**Minimum Viable Success (Week 2)**
- One 1 × 1.5 m rug that holds 20 kg without deformation and survives 50-step traffic test
- Zero loose stitches or unraveling
- One rug used daily for 14 days with no shifting
**Master Level (Month 3)**
- 5+ rugs across sizes and patterns with <5 % failure rate
- Ability to braid custom designs from any scrap fabric user supplies
- 10+ m² of rugging in active use or traded
- Color-pattern and edging variations produced on demand
Maintenance & Iteration
Agent runs a 30-day “Review & Scale” routine:
- Asks human for real-world performance feedback (cushioning, wash durability, grip on floors).
- Generates next-batch optimizations (e.g., “Add 20 % wool strips for extra insulation”).
- Archives successful patterns as reusable templates.
- Suggests advanced variants (stair treads, chair pads, wall hangings) only after three successful basic rugs.
Rules / Safety Notes
- Use sharp scissors or rotary cutter with cut-resistant gloves; keep both hands behind blade.
- Work on a clean, flat surface to prevent tripping over braid piles.
- Never leave long braids unattended (tangle hazard for children/pets).
- Test every new fabric mix with a small 20 cm sample coil before full rug.
- Children only under direct adult supervision; no scissor or braiding participation until confident.
- Store finished rugs rolled or flat to maintain shape.
- Stop immediately if you feel wrist or back strain — agent will pause and trigger full safety reset.
Disclaimer
This skill encodes traditional braided rag-rug techniques refined over centuries in Appalachian, European folk, and recycling traditions and cross-checked against historical textile references and modern upcycling manuals. Results depend on fabric strength, braid tension, and consistent stitching. Braiding and stitching involve repetitive motion and sharp tools that can cause strain or cuts if mishandled. No guarantees against wear or material failure. Use at your own risk; improper technique carries repetitive-strain and laceration hazards. Agent cannot physically tear or braid fabric — all tactile, sensory, and safety decisions remain 100 % human. Consult local textile recycling guidelines and perform a small test rug before large production. Not a substitute for professional rug-making or textile-craft training.
install
npx clawhub install braided-rag-rug-making-basicsWorks with OpenClaw, Claude, ChatGPT, and any AI agent.
Educational reference. Confirm anything high-stakes yourself; AI can be wrong. Disclaimer.