THE STRING MANUAL

from How We Came to Wear Our Bodies

Christopher Fritton

YARN RAIN

The early yarn rains quickly saturated. Once fabric evaporated, clouds formed, filamental precipitation followed. Strings became ubiquitous and elemental. String is far more durable and versatile than water, air, and earth (see fig. 1.0). We need only string and fire. Revision: We need only string. Fire is just strings faster. Ashes are just strings slower. When string burns, the ashes become wider, slower strings. We are strings, slower and faster. Your velocity is what insures that you don't blend into every thing else, what makes you appear against where the air was, where there are only strings now. Without string we could not sew ourselves to one another, we could not sew ourselves to the air or the earth, we would fall off, or in. Our attachment is functional, our selves are sewn in, and the out we can sew on top of the self-sewn-in is a necessity, both protective and cosmetic.

fig. 1.0 – Magnification of a puddle (100,000x). Shortly after the first yarn rains, microscopic implements were designed to sew puddles together into long stretches of "water," previously called "rivers" and "lakes," now called "ropes" and "blankets." This method of artificial cohesion proved too costly to maintain, and more efficient glues were developed and became widely used. Puddle sewing and puddle knitting (often still done in the home for the amusement of children) became outmoded, kept alive only as a novelty and artists' concern.

SEWING ONESELF IN

The self may be sewn inside oneself, but first the self must be sewn into the space that it occupies. Only when the self is sewn into space can it begin to wear others, or be referred to as wearing itself. Wearing one's self is a complicated procedure, a daunting task, but also a fundamental garmental requirement (see fig. 1.1 and 1.1.1). Wearing an other before one wears one's self is risky, especially when one considers the susceptibility of porous bodies to assimilation and integration.

fig. 1.1 — Male: How to properly wear one's self and an other. Note the absence of the lower half; there is only one proper clothing option for the male legs.

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fig. 1.1.1 — Female: How to properly wear one's self and an other.

STAY-STITCHING

Sewing oneself in begins with stay-stitching. Stay stitching eliminates stretching and slipping of the fabric, or "skin." Once the skin is secure, seams can be added. Seaming is an intricate ritual that involves a delicate material balance; functional and decorative, seaming is among the most influential garment accents. Contrary to the popular notion that it is a purely superficial endeavor, self-stitching serves a number of different functions (see fig. 1.2).

fig. 1.2 — Three-step medical/ cosmetic self-stitching procedure. First, the "skin" or cloth is sheared and creased (A). Next, the skin is stay-stitched to avoid stretching and shifting (B). Finally, the skin is surged (overstitched) to prevent fraying. Self-stitching is a popular cosmetic pastime often used to alter the appearance, but it is also an effectual medical solution for loss of string.

BREATHING STRING

String suspiration, also know as "darting," involves quickly alternating inhalations and exhalations of floss. The danger of relaxed breathing is the entanglement of filaments in the lungs; early suffocations were often referred to as getting "knotted." Because bodies are string, tangling is a constant problem. Yarn rain is a serious danger. The most common solution has been the calculated integration of hair canvas into the garment of the body (see fig. 1.3). When an area of the body has been super-saturated with fabric or a weave is too fine, it becomes string-proof, with the notable exception of purposely-stitched swatches.

fig. 1.3 — An internal rotating hair canvas disk that makes the upper body rainproof. Note the small cloth gutters for detangling, or "runoff".

HAIR CANVAS

Getting the bodies of others to "take" to the self can be difficult. Hair canvas grafts are used to accelerate assimilation and interweaving (see fig. 1.4). The self often rejects wearing the bodies of others, but resistance decreases as the number of others worn increases. Immunity is blanketed. It is also used extensively when an impatient self wants to wear an other; we find that we often cannot wait to be covered.

fig. 1.4 — A small shift dress pattern with integrated hair canvas stripe. Both fashionable and functional, hair canvas garments expedite incorporation. Small hair canvas accessories are manufactured as well, accompanied by directions that recommend duration of wear or grip that forms a bond.

CORD CIRCULATION

When blood became string, the pumping action of the heart became useless. The cords that course through the sheathes of our veins resonate quietly beneath our cloth. The yarn vibrato fades as it unfolds. Each wave loses its own voltage. The heart no longer beats, it shimmers slightly, vibrating, replenishing the singing flood. The heart must be helped in order to achieve this unfamiliar task; shivering jackets and coats have been designed with capillary thread (see fig. 1.5). Blood passes from the body into these garments and out again, reverberating with newly charged string. Gently stroking apparel aids circulation and can produce a slight echo. If enough bodies are situated closely in a room, the chorus of their blood can be heard.

fig. 1.5 — Part of an instruction set for an entire coat unit, including arrows that indicate the path of string circulation throughout the torso and appendages. String moves from the capillaries into the body and circulates among the weave, eventually accommodating the second layer. Clothing of this type aids what used to be the heart. Note the hair canvas along the neck and shoulder.

FABRIC VISCOSITY

Thicker fabric moves more slowly. Finer fabric produces less friction; correspondingly it is cooler and faster. When the body must move quickly, fitted braces are attached that increase fabric viscosity (see fig. 1.6). Speed is a safety measure. We are all strings, but to ensure that we do not become other kinds of strings, we must constantly move at different speeds from our surroundings. This discrepancy in velocity is called being "alive." We are only alive because we are moving at a different speed from all the strings around us. Sometimes clothing can keep us from disappearing.

fig. 1.6 — A simple neck and arm facing unit with viscosity stimulators. Thicker cloth is more viscous, moves slower, and affects the wearer accordingly. Ultimately, it can cause one to vanish.

BELTING TECHNIQUES

Belting has become a popular less-permanent alternative to sewing others to the body in the years since the string revolution (see fig. 1.7). We simply do not want things to be a part of us forever. Semi-permanent proximity vouchers accompany the commercial distribution of belts, permitting fabric relations of a new kind, and fostering a black market voucher exchange that enables prohibited body-garment combinations. Belting for long periods often results in the same level of integration that sewing or grafting of others to the self does. You cannot always choose to make something no longer a part of you.

fig. 1.7 — A diagram illustrating early covert belting techniques. Shortly after the string revolution, belting was illegal. The laws have since been repealed, and the production of belts has become a commercial and social success. Note the folding of the skin around the edge of the garment to be belted, and the trimming of excess skin in order to effectively hide the secret. Early belters were fervent advocates of temporary attachment, but often paid the price with open wounds.

THE SOFT SUIT

The soft suit is a full body covering that obscures the self. It is a component ensemble sometimes made with pieces of a single other, but more frequently with pieces of numerous others. Soft suits are worn over protective layers of slow-moving cloth so that they do not take. Often part of the suit breaches these protective layers and the wearer is left partially covered. We try to be inside someone else, but they get on the outside of us and start working their way in. We are all clothes, clothed, and close. Clothes are directional; we move them and they make us move. We are all moving strings, all of our motion moves other strings. Our string hands do what other string hands have done and our string faces do what other string faces have done. We are all soft suits. We are all wearing someone else's soft suit. We will all be wearing someone else soon enough and they will be wearing us.

fig. 1.8 — Visual tips on how best to wear a soft suit or "disguise". The soft suit is a directional garment; "start here" reminds us that in order to be most effective, clothing must be worn in a particular direction, so as to move the body accordingly.

   

 

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How We Came to Wear Our Bodies began as a small handmade, hand-typed book called Jute. It is divided into two sections, "The String Witness" and "The String Manual." " The String Witness" is a sparse poem that may or may not be the transcript of a man sitting at an empty table answering an interrogator's questions about a revolution. The revolution he inadequately describes may or may not be an analogy for the advent of super string theory. "The String Manual" contains found fragments of a State issued publication, a handbook for social and physical interaction in a world where fluid has been supplanted by string.