Vintage scout handbook-style infographic showing a 6-step sequence for tying a water knot with flat webbing, illustrated in a sage and rust palette on aged paper. Clean instructional visuals, precise rope geometry, and subtle sailing cues support the search intent how to tie braid to fluoro while keeping a refined brand-friendly look.
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 Water Knot". 6 numbered step cards in sequence, arranged vertically or in a 3×2 grid. Theme and styling: vintage scout handbook, sage and rust palette, aged paper texture, clean instructional illustration, precise anatomically correct rope geometry, clear rope path visibility, subtle sailing context cues. Show a flat tape-style rope/strap appropriate for a water knot, with consistent over-under routing and tightened knot progression. Step 1: form a loose overhand knot in one end of the strap. Step 2: leave a tail and show the knot open and clearly readable. Step 3: take the second end and retrace the exact path of the overhand knot in reverse, running parallel to the first strand. Step 4: continue feeding the second end through every turn, keeping strands flat and untwisted. Step 5: dress the knot neatly so both strands lie snug and parallel, with visible equal tails. Step 6: tighten fully by pulling standing parts and tails, then show the finished water knot cleanly dressed and secure. Each card must include: a clear visual of the action, a short heading IN English, and a one-line caption IN English. Include a critical safety callout box in English: "Always have knot checked by a partner". Add a small sailing use-case note in English for webbing/strap applications. Render the target search intent only visually with no on-image text. 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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