{"title":"How to Make a Paracord Bracelet (Cobra Weave)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/jewelry-making/how-to-make-a-paracord-bracelet","category":{"slug":"jewelry-making","name":"Jewelry Making"},"creator":{"name":"Beadaholique - STORE CLOSING, Everything on Sale!","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_bUcF0Vda0W0K6Ek7ygorw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KWW5_xm3o4Y"},"tldr":"Make a paracord bracelet with the basic cobra weave. Two-color build with a plastic buckle, square knots, and a melt-fused finish - clean tutorial.","totalDurationSeconds":891,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Disposable lighter","Flush cutters or sharp scissors","Beading mat or work surface"],"materials":["550 paracord, color A (6 feet)","550 paracord, color B (6 feet)","Plastic side-release buckle (0.6 inch / 15mm)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Gather Supplies and Measure Your Paracord","text":"You'll need two colors of 550 paracord, a 0.6 inch plastic buckle, a basic disposable lighter, and either flush cutters or strong scissors. Don't substitute a torch lighter - it'll burn straight through nylon paracord.Cut about a foot of paracord per inch of finished braid. For a seven-inch wrist, you want five inches of knotting (two inches gets eaten by the buckle), which means about five feet of cord, but cut six feet to give yourself slack to work with."},{"number":2,"title":"Attach the Cord to the Buckle","text":"Separate the male and female halves of your buckle. Pick one cord, fold it so a small loop sticks up, and pass that loop through one of the slots on the female buckle.Pull the loop out the back, then thread the two long ends of the cord through the loop and pull tight. That's a lark's head knot. The buckle is now anchored to the cord."},{"number":3,"title":"Fuse the Two Cords Into One Core","text":"To get a two-color bracelet you need to join the second color onto the first so the core running down the middle has both colors hidden inside. Trim a tail on the first cord, pull back the outer sheath about three-quarters of an inch, and snip out the inner threads. That gives you a hollow tube.On the second cord, melt the cut end with the lighter until it's dark and shiny, then press it against the side of the lighter to harden it. Once cool, push the hardened end into the hollow of the first cord. Then briefly hold the join in the flame to fuse the two together."},{"number":4,"title":"Tie the First Cobra Knot","text":"Now you've got two long working cords on the outside and the fused core down the middle. Take the LEFT cord and lay it OVER the core, making a backward 4 shape. Take the RIGHT cord and lay it OVER the tail of the left cord, then bring it UNDER the core and UP through the loop made by the left cord.Pull both ends out sideways and snug them down against the buckle. That's one half of a cobra knot."},{"number":5,"title":"Reverse the Knot for the Alternating Pass","text":"Now the same knot, mirrored. Take the LEFT cord and lay it UNDER the core. Take the RIGHT cord and lay it UNDER the left cord, then bring it OVER the core and through the loop. Pull tight.The mnemonic is: under, under, over, through. Alternating these two halves is what keeps the bracelet flat. If you accidentally do the same direction twice in a row, the braid starts spiraling - back up and redo it."},{"number":6,"title":"Knot to Length","text":"Keep alternating - over-over-under-through, then under-under-over-through - all the way down. Snug each knot tight against the previous one before moving on.Stop when the braid is the right length to meet the male half of the buckle. Pass the core through the male buckle and tie one final knot, locking the buckle in place. Now both ends of the bracelet are anchored."},{"number":7,"title":"Trim and Seal the Ends","text":"Cut the loose ends down to about an eighth of an inch above the final knot. Melt the tip with the lighter until it's molten, then quickly press the side of the lighter against it to flatten and widen the end.That mushroom of melted nylon is what keeps the cord from pulling back through the knot. Let it cool fully before touching - molten paracord burns. Repeat on the second end and you're done."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:35:50.210Z","published":"2026-05-06T15:10:24.712Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}