Minimal flat infographic showing how to tie a bowline knot in 6 clear vertical steps, with rope path arrows, loop labels, and a parchment-toned editorial craft style. Designed for pretty knots and macramé-inspired searches, it ends with a finished decorative bowline and a climbing safety callout.
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 Bowline Knot". 6 numbered step cards in a clean vertical sequence, instructional layout. Topic: bowline knot. Use case emphasis: decorative / macramé. Style: minimal flat illustration, vintage parchment palette, tidy editorial infographic, anatomically correct rope geometry, clear rope path and crossings, high legibility, elegant craft aesthetic, visually appealing for the search intent pretty knots. Each numbered card must show the rope action clearly, with a short heading IN English and a one-line caption IN English. Step 1: form a small loop near the standing part. Step 2: pass the working end up through the loop. Step 3: wrap the working end behind the standing part. Step 4: bring the working end back down through the loop. Step 5: hold the loop and pull both ends to dress the knot. Step 6: show the finished bowline neatly tightened, balanced, and decorative for macramé use. Include a small final callout card with a safety note in English: "For climbing use, always have knot checked by a partner". Add subtle arrows, loop labels, and tension direction indicators, all in English. Clean instructional illustration, no hands unless needed, plain parchment background, no clutter. 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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