On the weaving side, I wove a disaster project for my study group's supplemental warp project. Let me detail the issues.
For my study group's supplemental warp project, I decided to do a warp wise shibori without doing a sample and not from a published recipe.I turned a simple monks belt pattern and decided to go with it instead of consulting some woven shibori books for guidance or suggestions.
Turned Monk's belt |
Why 8/2 cotton? I recall reading it somewhere, but I don't recall where. I had a minor twinge about it not being strong enough to be a pull thread, which I ignored.
Happily weaving |
As I wove away, I decided not to fix a few weaving errors near the edges (I'm okay
with this). The plain weave was pretty relaxing, so much so that I'll do some plain weave in the next few months.
with this). The plain weave was pretty relaxing, so much so that I'll do some plain weave in the next few months.
Gathered and ready for the dye pot |
I pulled the warp from both ends as I was supposed to but as the thread gathered on the supplemental warp, some of them broke. Some of the areas are not well gathered because of that, or maybe because there may have been some snarls due to the tension inconsistencies mentioned earlier.
I failed to measure the dye or mordant correctly because Oh Just Because, so the piece is a lighter green than I expected.
Looking at the finished piece, I see a couple of things. 24 EPI is too close of a sett for 8/2 tencel in plain weave (yep, there is documentation on the internets that confirms this); the fabric is firm and would make a nice vest fabric, but not the drapey shawl goodness I was expecting from the tencel. Some reflection on the process is making me wonder if I needed to sett my supplemental warp as dense as the background warp; I think every other dent would have worked better. A small amount of research into woven shibori and a quick peak at a master yarn sett chart might have given me more info. In the absence of that data, sampling might have given me the information I needed.
Why was this project so under-thought and full of errors that I could easily have avoided? My brain was not engaged. There's been a lot going on lately, and these things happen from time to time. Still, after all this is said, had I measured correctly and come up with a 3 yard fabric, it would have made a lovely shawl. As it is, it's a lovely sample and will go into the fabric bin for future use.
lookin' good. Really interesting! i like the color of green . . .
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