01113nas a2200241 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653001900043653001500062653002200077653001300099653003000112653002400142653001700166653002500183100001400208245005600222856014700278300001200425490000600437520040800443022002000851 d10aCat’s cradle10aEmbodiment10aEnacted knowledge10aEnaction10aHaddon’s string figures10aintangible heritage10aLeavers lace10aString-figure making1 aD. Eastop00aString figures matter: Embodied knowledge in action uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928572420&doi=10.1386%2fcrre.5.2.221_1&partnerID=40&md5=1a0e0bbb34e1632d6c40abed75b9fe08 a221-2290 v53 aUnderstanding the interaction of maker and what is made is important for craft research. The position taken in this article is that the making of string figures (sometimes known as cat’s cradles) provides a useful model of, and for, the interaction between maker and what is made. String figures are both artefacts and representations, and making them is a process of embodiment and enacted knowledge. a20404689 (ISSN)