Blog posts tagged with handwoven

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Weaving a throw for the Sofa.

Busy few weeks - the other (ie paid) job is taking all my time. I am a contestant in an online Science/Schools outreach competition called “I’m a scientists, get me out of here” Find it HERE

In between time, I am starting a new warp - a time of fear and excitement.

This is for a throw that DH wants for the sofa ... and first of 3 if it works OK. Here’s the design (a screen capture from my Fiberworks PCW design programme). The design is a check based on a Fibonacci series (ie 1 1 2 3 5 8 ..... each number is the sum of the previous 2 numbers)
Wool is ~14/2 Shetland from Fairfield Yarms.  Warp > 750 ends (Ouch how did I get that many) and 6m long

throw1 design

Loom rewarped. A nice start - it looks   like the last treadle tie-up will accidentally make a nice twill -   pure serendipity and it’ll save me a few hours messing around with treadles while crouched inside the back of the loom. A threading error in the middle, but I think I’ll leave it as it makes a “feature” in the weave.
Sigh ... I didn’t win my zone prize in the “I’m a scientist - Get me out of here” project, in fact I got evicted on Wednesday. Still the excellent news is that one of our current astro postgrads won in her zone, and one of our ex-post grads, now a post doc in Bonn both won! (And I get a coffee mug to celebrate competing)
More time for the weaving though, but I’ve lost the intermediate photos. If I find I’ll add them  later. Photo to follow I hope
Meanwhile, with very few warp breakages, I breezed along and the throw is pretty well finished.  It’s always a great feeling when the end of the warp emerges round the back beam - only a few foot of weaving left. end of the warp appears
Throw - before washing Cut off the loom, here’s the weaving - all it needs now is a few washes to fluff up the wool and some end finishing and I’m ready for the next project.

 

 

 


Tags: handwoven, furnishing fabric

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Designing for the next rug(s)

HELP! - I am threatened with PUBLICITY.

Which is good, but I am of a nervous and retiring disposition, and my workshop is designed for work rather than looks (Alright, I confess - its a mess!) 

The current weaving is almost done now.

I have had a week of meetings, including a Tapestry rug in Schloss Ringbergvery pleasant meeting of the EPTA at Schloss Ringberg, where the Bauhaus and Art Deco Furnishings proved very distracting. I managed some quiet time alone with this rug, and was surprised to find that it was woven as a tapestry rather than loom woven. The colours are turquoise (probably custom dyed to match the handpainted wallpaper, ceramic stove, upholstery, paintings etc) and what seems to be natural light and dark fleece colours. I wish there was more information about this, but apart from the fact that all the wall tapestries were made to the design of the architect/artist Friedrich Attenhuber in Munich and that much of the furniture was created by local craft workers, there is no specific information about this piece. I would love to know more.
(I have more detailed pictures on  my FBAlbum)

bathroom colours

 

Where was I?  Oh yes ... current weaving is almost done, so its time to plan for the next project. 2 small rugs to match a new bathroom.  Here’s the colour scheme so far, a heavy single ply darkish yarn and a couple of light 2 plys,the pinkish one looks a better match than the sandy one, but I’ll check again in daylight.

 

 

 

Later…. Bother, colours NOT approved. Request is now for  a design and colours similar to this old mat (currently doing time as a draft excluder. This is good and bad, since the mat (a krokbragd weave, can be made in all the smaller quantities of naturals that I have on hand, including the handspun that I’m spinning (see the Rug from scratch blog)

Tags: schloss ringberg, rug, handwoven, bathroom accessories

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It’s not finished until it’s FINISHED

Following from my last post, the photoshoot and interview produced a really good article in November’s issue of Cheshire Life (and you should all go out and buy a copy if you’re in Cheshire.  Meanwhile Gillian has some of the pictures in the Made by Hands of Britain Blog.

2 small sample rugsAlso following from the previous post, the weaving that was just a few inches of photographer’s eye candy is now two small sampling rugs relaxing on the floor ready to be finished. (A rug is woven under as much tension as I can manage to crank onto the loom without something breaking, so when it is finally cut free, its’ worth letting the whole thing lie very flat for at least 24 hours before taking any further action!)

Here are the two new rugs. They were made from handspun yarns and commercial yarns in natural colours (all the remnants from previous projects that I could find) and used a variety of weaves and patterns. The top rug is woven in a 3 end twill called “Krokbragd”. It is relaxing pattern side down to take out the curl where it was wrapped around the takeup beam of the loom while the second rug was woven. The second (lower) rug is woven in a 4 shaft broken twill. The twill offers a wider range of patterns and the back is the same as the front so the rug is double sided. I have made cones and diamond shapes along with combs and zigzags, but the patterns are not as sharp as the Krokbragd ones. (The pictures below show bits of the front of the Krokbragd rug)

Krokbragd rug rough edge

 

 

 

There is a final piece of work to be done now for these rugs before they can be called finished and that’s to complete the edges. All those loose bits of warp need to be dealt with in such a way as to stop the rug unravelling. This will be another experiment.

 

 

 

I generally put a knotted fringe on the edges of a rug. This gives a neat finish and I know from experience that it is hard wearing, long lasting and encourages a rug to lie flat. But not everyone or every situation needs a fringe, so I’m experimenting with several ways to tie the ends and weave them in. I can then see how well this style of finish wears.

Here is result of a “Damascus” edging on one end of the Krokbragd rug, neat and tidy, but it’s pulled the edges of the rug in a bit (not shown here) .  So by no means perfect.
I’ll try a variation on the twill rug’s ends and see if that’s any better.

 

And the other result of the samplers is that I’m now starting a full size rug using some of the patterns that from the sample rugs. It was very tempting to weave a full size rug randomly (I changed colour every time a shuttle ran out and changed pattern at coffee, tea and lunch breaks) as the samples are very attractive, but I’ve decided to have a PLAN!

Tags: rug, krokbragd, handwoven, edge finish, damascas finish, cheshire life magazine, cheshire life

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Wooooo… photoshoot tomorrow

A clean studio

 

 

Just a quick note. Tomorrow I have  an interview for a local magazine and a photographer is coming to take some pictures of the workshop. I have just spent the hardest afternoon of recent years cleaning up. In fact it all looks so smart, that it is now officially a studio, rather than a workshop (or to be totally honest -  a garage).

I even had time to add a few more inches to the latest rug, but now I think that I’d better leave everything in case I get it disarrayed! This is the “rug from scratch” from earlier blogs, I’m using up handspun in white, grey, black and brown. This style of weave is called Krokbragd but I’d forgotten how slow it is to weave, so I may not be able to offer rugs in this style at a reasonable price. I have enough warp on the loom for 2 small rugs and a full size one, so I shall try out a broken twill weave next and see if that is any faster. It should be able to make similar small patterns. The final rug, will be either of these 2 weaves, or a plain weave (since I need to know how fast I can weave that style).

Tags: cheshire life, cheshire life magazine, handwoven, rug, wool

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More on the Crinkle Scarf-On and Off the Loom

A few photos of the progress of the crinkle scarf, showing the open weave structure, some slight contraction on removal from the loom, and the finished effect after washing and drying.

 

crinkle scarf on loom

 

crinkle of loom

 

finished crinkle scarf

Tags: wool, scarf, loom, handwoven, cotton

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