Clean technical infographic showing seven numbered steps for tying a Celtic knot lanyard for fishing, with arrows, loop highlights, and a finished tackle-ready result. Vintage parchment styling and precise rope geometry give it a classic outdoor guide feel aligned with wind knot salmon guides search intent.
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 Celtic Knot Lanyard for Fishing". 7 numbered step cards in sequence, arranged vertically or in a 3×N grid. Each card shows a clear rope-tying action with anatomically correct rope geometry, clean technical schematic styling, and a vintage parchment palette. Theme and use case: fishing lanyard, with subtle fishing context cues such as salmon-guide gear, tackle attachment, or streamside utility, but no extra decorative clutter. Step 1: measure and form the initial loop in the cord. Step 2: create the first crossing turn. Step 3: weave the working end over-under to build the Celtic interlace pattern. Step 4: continue the interlaced path symmetrically. Step 5: feed both ends to form the lanyard structure and attachment loop. Step 6: dress the knot carefully, aligning crossings neatly. Step 7: tighten evenly and show the finished Celtic knot lanyard ready for fishing use. Each step card must include a short heading IN English and a one-line caption IN English. Include arrows, path indicators, loop highlights, and clear sequence numbers. Add a small safety/warning callout relevant to knot reliability for field use, styled as a schematic note. Render the target search intent visually only: wind knot salmon guides, with no on-image text for that phrase. Clean instructional illustration, precise linework, readable layout, high contrast against parchment background, no gore, no watermarks. 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".
Tell us why this image is inappropriate. A description is required — generic submissions are dismissed. Confirmed reports are resolved within 24 hours.