Vintage-style instructional infographic showing how to tie a sheet bend in 6 clear steps, using two ropes of different thickness in a rope rescue context. Clean scout handbook aesthetics, parchment tones, inked linework, and subtle chinese knot hanging ornament-inspired framing motifs add distinctive visual appeal.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Numbered steps infographic titled "How to Tie a Sheet Bend". 6 numbered step cards in sequence, vertical layout, clean instructional illustration in a vintage scout handbook style with vintage parchment palette, subtle inked linework, aged paper texture, and anatomically correct rope geometry. Show two ropes of different thickness to emphasize the sheet bend in a rope rescue context. Each step card must include: a clear visual of the action, a short heading IN English, and a one-line caption IN English. Step 1: form a bight in the thicker rope. Step 2: pass the working end of the thinner rope up through the bight. Step 3: wrap it behind both parts of the bight. Step 4: tuck the working end under itself on the same side. Step 5: dress the knot neatly with both tails visible on the same side. Step 6: tighten and inspect the finished sheet bend under light load. Include a critical safety callout box for climbing / rescue use: "always have knot checked by a partner". Add a small visual context cue for rope rescue use, but no dangerous scene, no people in peril. Visually hint at decorative rope looping shapes inspired by the search intent "chinese knot hanging ornament" only as subtle non-text ornamental framing motifs, without changing the knot being taught and without any on-image reference text to that search intent. End with a small finished-knot panel showing the correctly dressed sheet bend. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no graphic gore, no watermarks. Anatomically correct rope geometry. For climbing knots, include critical-safety callout — "always have knot checked by a partner".
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