granny’s not so square, after all: hyperbolic tilings with truly hyperbolic crochet motifs

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Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs Joshua Holden Joint work with (and execution by) Lana Holden http://www.rose-hulman.edu/ ~holden 1 / 22

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Until now, most methods for making a hyperbolic plane from crochet or similar fabrics have fallen into one of two categories. In one type, the work starts from a point or line and expands in a sequence of increasingly long rows, creating a constant negative curvature. In the other, polygonal tiles are created out of a more or less Euclidean fabric and then attached in such a way that the final product approximates a hyperbolic plane on the large scale with an average negative curvature. On the small scale, however, the curvature of the fabric will be closer to zero near the center of the tiles and more negative near the vertices and edges, depending on the amount of stretch in the fabric. The goal of this project is to show how crochet can be used to create polygonal tiles which themselves have constant negative curvature and can therefore be joined into a large region of a hyperbolic plane without significant stretching. Formulas from hyperbolic trigonometry are used to show how, in theory, any regular tiling of the hyperbolic plane can be produced in this way.

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Page 1: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Granny’s Not SoSquare, After All:Hyperbolic Tilings

with Truly HyperbolicCrochet Motifs

Joshua Holden

Joint work with (andexecution by) Lana Holden

http://www.rose-hulman.edu/~holden

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Page 2: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A hyperbolic plane is a surface with constant negativecurvature.

[The Geometry Center]

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Page 3: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A positive curvature surface bends away from thesame side of its tangent plane in every direction.

[Wikipedia]

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Page 4: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A zero curvature surface is flat (in at least onedirection).

[Robert Gardner, ETSU]

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Page 5: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A negative curvature surface bends away fromdifferent sides of its tangent plane.

[Wikipedia]

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Page 6: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Also, on a negative curvature surface circles havelarger circumferences than they “should”.

(This is the Bertrand-Diquet-Puiseux Theorem.)

[Daina Taimina and the Institute For Figuring]

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Page 7: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

So one way to produce a hyperbolic plane is toconstruct it in arcs of exponentially increasing length.

[Daina Taimina and the Institute For Figuring]

Daina Taimina realized that you could do this with crochetstitches.

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Page 8: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A regular tiling fills a surface completely withcongruent regular polygons.

[Lana Holden]

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Page 9: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

A regular tiling of the hyperbolic plane has morepolygons around each vertex than it “should”.

[Wikipedia]

And correspondingly, the interior angles are smaller than they“should be”.

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Page 10: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

We could construct the surface first and then tile it.

[Daina Taimina]

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Page 11: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Or we could make flat tiles and attach them in such away that they curve negatively.

[Helaman Ferguson and Jeffrey Weeks]

Helaman Ferguson did this with stretchy materials such aspolar fleece that distribute the curvature.

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Page 12: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Our goal is to make tiles which are the correct shapeand the correct curvature.

[Lana Holden]

(Daina Taimina previously made some progress towards this.)

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Page 13: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

To calculate the correct shape, we use the (Second)Hyperbolic Law of Cosines:

[Wikipedia]

cos C = − cos A cos B + sin A sin B cosh c13 / 22

Page 14: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

The number of sides of the polygon and the number ofpolygons around a vertex determine the angles.

For our construction, we need to know the inradius, thecircumradius, and the side length.

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Page 15: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

We will crochet the tiles using variations of the classic“granny square”.

[Purl Soho and purlbee.com]

The inradius determines the number of rounds.

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Page 16: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

We need to vary the pattern to add the exponentiallyincreasing length.

We add exponentially spaced increases to achieve the desiredside length.

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Page 17: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

We need to vary the pattern to add the exponentiallyincreasing length.

We substitute longer stitches to achieve the desiredcircumradius.

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Page 18: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Et voilà!

[Lana Holden]

Five of these hyperbolic squares go around each vertex, ratherthan the “usual” four.

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Page 19: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Other “granny polygons” are also found in moderncrochet.

[Lana Holden]

Here we have put three “granny hexagons” around each vertex.

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Page 20: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

And we can make hyperbolic versions of some ofthem.

[Lana Holden]

Here we have put four “granny hexagons” around each vertex.

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Page 21: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

In theory we could construct any hyperbolic tiling.

However, as the interior angles get sharper, it will become moreand more difficult to turn the corners.

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Page 22: Granny’s Not So Square, After All: Hyperbolic Tilings with Truly Hyperbolic Crochet Motifs

Hope you enjoyed the show!

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