Miller's knot


A miller's knot is a binding knot used to secure the opening of a sack or bag. Historically, large sacks often contained grains; thus the association of these knots with the miller's trade. Several knots are known interchangeably by these three names.
Constrictor makes a fiercer binding knot, but Miller's/Bag is suitable for most applications, and is easier to tie/untie. Miller's/Bag makes a great hitch, like the similar Ground-Line. Binding usage has force emanating from inside rope ring evenly, hitch usage has force input from one side, then reducing around.

Variations

As noted above, several other distinct knots have historically been known as miller's, sack, or bag knots; namely ABOK-1241, ABOK-1242, ABOK-1243, ABOK-1674, ABOK-11 and their slipped versions. These fit the short description "two crossing turns – ends tucked under".
The following 3 knots do not fit the simple "two crossing turns – ends tucked under" definition but are very secure:

Tying

The common aspects of the most common bag knots are two crossing turns, and both ends tucked under some turns near the crossing point. Two ends, and two turns one can tuck under, gives a limited number of alternatives. All of these knots can also be made in a slipped form by starting with a bight and/or by completing the final tuck with a bight instead of the end.
To avoid ambiguity, versions of these knots that are not slipped are pictured below with the reference numbers found in The Ashley Book of Knots.
This is to tie a Constrictor knot version of the miller's knot:
  1. Grip the neck of the bag with the left hand,
  2. Fix / immobilize one end of the rope tucked upwards over the left hand long finger and under the index finger
  3. Make two crossing turns around the neck of the bag. Detailed steps:
  4. # Cross over the hand downwards and take one turn around the neck of the bag at the sack side of the hand
  5. # Cross over the hand upwards as well as over the immobilized other end,
  6. # Take a second turn around the neck of the bag at the opening side of the hand
  7. Cross over the immobilized other end of the rope, then cross back tucking under the crossing point of step 3.2,.
To tie the other variants:
  1. If at the last step one chooses not to cross the immobilized other end and tuck only inwards under the part between the two turns, the knot will be an ABoK #11 or Clove hitch.
  2. If at the last step one chooses to cross the immobilized other end and tuck only under the part between the two turns, the knot will be an ABoK #1242
  3. or a ground-line hitch pictured. It should be tightened by pulling the end first. It is also called Spar hitch
  4. If at the last step one chooses to cross over the crossing point, and then tuck outwards under the first turn, the knot will be an ABoK #1241 pictured.
  5. If at the last step one chooses to cross over the crossing point, and then tuck inwards under the first turn, the knot will be an ABoK #1674 pictured. Shown in a slipped form at entry #1244, this variation is noted by Ashley as having better binding characteristics than the others.
Tying other knots that also may function very well as a bag knot but are slightly different from above descriptions:
  1. Strangle knot
  2. # Grip the neck of the bag with the left hand,
  3. # Fix / immobilize one end of the rope tucked upwards over the left hand long and under the index finger
  4. # Make two parallel turns around the neck of the bag. Detailed steps:
  5. ## Cross over the hand downwards and take one turn around the neck of the bag first at the sack side of the hand, then over the hand and behind the immobilized other end.
  6. ## Take another turn crossing over the immobilized other end, crossing downwards over the hand around the neck of the bag parallel to the first turn
  7. # Cross over the immobilized other end of the rope, then cross back tucking under both turns,.
  8. Bottle sling