This investigation will help you explore number factors in an artistic way by creating Celtic knots.
An example of a 3 by 5 rectangle with edge markings
Starting along the bottom edge at the marking on the left, we draw up and to the right until we hit the top edge, and continue bouncing around the inside of the rectangle.
Finished! We hit every marking along the way.
The lines are now larger, and curved at the edges.
You can use these shapes as templates for the corner, edge, and middle squares
Travelling along the line, we alternate between going over and going under.
This is your Celtic knot!
Celtic knots have been drawn, engraved, and carved for centuries, first appearing in 300-400 CE in the days of the Roman empire. The Celts lived throughout Western Europe and developed the style into artwork that is still found all throughout the region and produced to this day. It is likely inspired by rope plaiting and basket weaving.
Here is a slightly different example, using the numbers 3 and 6. Here's the grid at the start:
Now here is what happens when we start our line and bounce around until we reach where we started:
Notice that we haven't reached all the marks yet,even though we looped back to the beginning. If we pick another one and start again, and keep going until we hit all the marks, we need three different lines: