DIY Hammock

I completed my most recent project tonight.  It only took 2 months, $135, and as Jeni says: 412 steps.  Not going to win any speed awards here, but it is actually completed!  Compared to most of my projects, that’s saying something 🙂

Wayyy back in early April, the weather suddenly turned nice for a few days and I was struck with a craving for a hammock.  I considered buying one, but then found an article from the May 1982 edition of Mother Earth News on making a “Heavenly Hammock”, and convinced myself it would be a great project.

Materials

Twine – $12
Wood – $6
Welded metal rings – $4

Beer – $8

Hammock stand – $100

Tools

Drill
Candle
Netting Shuttle

Version 0

It took several nights over the course of a week or two to actually weave this thing.  The weaving was awkward at first, but after a few rows I got the hang of it.  I would advise anyone making their first hammock to weave some extra rows at the end, and then go back and cut off the top several rows that (probably) look terrible in comparison.

I started with several spools of twine and a homemade shuttle cut from a six-pack of Smirnoff something or other:
TwineHigh-class Smirnoff shuttle

After weaving back and forth and back and forth the hammock took shape.  For higher-tension runners down the sides, I braided 3 22-foot strands of gold twine together, and then folded it in half and did a 4-strand round braid with two 10′ pieces of white twine.  (For each side!) :
First night's weavingWeaving complete4-strand round-braided Cord

Version 1

The “completed” hammock sat unused in my room for a week or two or three without a stand, until Jeni convinced me today to just buy a pre-made (safe) stand and be done with it.  And so I present version 1!
Version 1: The first hanging

… it hit the ground immediately when I laid down in it:
Version 1: The first sitting... on the ground

Version 2

After some rework to cut out about 8 rows’ worth of inner netting, I produced Version 2.  It obviously went too far the other direction… though I could technically lay down on it:
Version 2: Reshaped a little too extremeVersion 2: Extremely narrow and unstable, but it holds me!

Version 3

The good news is that I “cut out” my 8 rows by just tying the netting on farther in, without actually cutting the twine.  Because I needed about 4 of those rows back… This time, the hammock looks like a hammock, sits like a hammock, works like a hammock 🙂
Version 3: Looks goodVersion 3: Third time's a charmVersion 3: Success!

… And the best part?  Tyson can jump me!  (He’ll do anything for a dish of hose water…)