Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Loom schedule

This is currently cracking me up but between wanting to do major stash-reduction pieces and an upcoming class I feel like I'm having to book time on my looms! 

I do not need another loom, and I repeat, I do not need another loom. Just to be clear.

What's the schedule look like? The Baby Mac is free and waiting for the double Huck class I'm taking with Callie Booker that started today. The two baby blankets on the Gilmore are in progress and should finish quickly.

I suspect the Mac will be occupied with double huck through the end of March.

Next up on the Gilmore will be some yardage in Bronson lace for my study group; I'm working on specs now.  I'd like to use up some of the 40/2 or 48/2 linen I have (I need to McMorran it again) but I don't want a new structure and a new fiber at the same time so I'm going to use the red or the green or the blue 20/2 cotton that I have; I think it'll be lovely. 

What else do I have lined up?

  • I have three cones of very fine linen that I'd like to play with; I think more fabric for summer shirts. The benefit to working on this during the winter is the humidity makes linen weaving easier.

  • I have 5 or 6 more skeins of Graceful, in two colorways. I'd like to use some of it as warp and that slubby silk, dyed a darker color as weft to make yardage for a woven sweatshirt. 
  • I have a undulating twill Scarf Kit that was Kathy's; that would be pretty easy and would free up one of the bins plus but a couple of scarves into the Finished Object state.
  • This ikat warp (mentioned last post) would like to be towels. Turns out I have a small amount of hand dyed  8/2 cotton in dark purple, green, and yellow that I would use sparingly to pop the purple...



Saturday, January 20, 2024

Tale of Two Scarves

Photos of the two scarves needed!!!

I've done a couple of posts about plans for the Graceful yarn, in particular, wanting to get the sett right in weaving with it. I did samples at 30 and 35 EPI; the 30 was popular with my study group, although I thought it bordered on sleazy, and the 35 was stiffer... I decided on the 35 and then left for vacation in Japan.

I bring this up because my DH brought along 3 of my hand crafting scarves on the
trip, and his favorite was the black and white crackle scarf I showed in progress here. I ended up disappointed in the scarf due to bad selvedges and an uneven beat and tossed it in the closet for a few years; I offered it to him as it was going in the goodwill bag and he loves that scarf.  Sadly, it kept getting caught on his zipper and snagging.... he felt bad but I don't think it was his fault.  The crackles scarf is loosely woven to the point of being sleazy; I can see the threads moving as I twist the scarf back and forth. Had I sett it closer, it would have been a little more cohesive and I think less likely to snag.  I used this to justify my decision to make the Graceful scarf a little denser.

So it's a 11.5 inch wide scarf, 80 inches long, in plain weave. There are a number of  doubled threads to give it a little texture; I also broke 5 threads and decided not to repair them so they're effectively doubled too. I will note I de-tensioned the warp when I stopped weaving most of the time to minimize stretching; I think the broken threads came when I forgot to do this. (ETA, it could also be that I wasn't advancing the warp enough.)

It took me a bit to get the hand of working with the yarn; it's very thin and very light; I had to learn to catch the loop as I threw the shuttle to make sure the selvedge fit in smoothly.  

I also very carefully double-wound the weft yarn (wound if off onto a storage bobbin, then from the storage bobbin onto a pirn) to preserve the color run. This worked fabulously, of course, until the point in the yarn where the manufacturer had tied on a new thread and the color change abruptly. This only happened once.

The color gradation is from purple to green, going through browns and golds... since I'm using the same yarn in warp and weft the color is a little muddy where colors opposite on the color wheel cross (i.e. purple and green, or  blue and orange), but it's a nice comfortable mud.  I think for the next project using this yarn I'll consider using a solid 20/2 cotton or that singles slubby silk (dyed?) for weft.

The scarf has a great hand, good drape, and feels like fabric; it will soften with use. I'm pleased.

Other projects: 
  1. I'm starting to thread baby blankets; it's beamed and ready to go.
  2. The shiny sweater is getting longer; I think I'm 12" down from the armholes with 4" more to go!
  3. I started cutting tile for the mosaic succulent stepping stones... First, I put the design next to the paver, and it's too big for the stones by about 1/2" inch; not a big deal as I can shrink the background accordingly. The bigger issue is my artistic swoopy leaf designs which just isn't got to be practical with high fire tile.  I've moved the design back to the studio for rework.
  4.  I tied an warp I've had for awhile and dyed it in 20 year old (ish) Lapis procion dye. The color was gorgeous! Until I went to wash it out. Needless to say the purple (instead of Lapis) was a disappointment and the blue that was there migrated under the ties... I was significantly upset about it until it dried; now it reminds me of a Aurora Borealis. I have to redesign the towels but I'm pretty excited about it.
  5. I checked out and read two books from the library on linocuts; I will try to find one of them to add to my library. I'm thinking of carving up a lino of a friend... I think I could do a 3 colors reduction print if I simplified it some. 



Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Q4 '23 Finished List (4/21)

What's on the finished list for Q4?
  • Two summer and winter rugs (see next blog post
  • 8 Christmas cards (simple yet lovely)
  • Ikat class piece
  • Test pieces for Graceful yarn. Do I count test pieces? Sure. It was a 2 yard warp, and completely separate from a project. Kind of like a mini-project. I'm counting it. 
I've already started on the 2024 Stashdown... I have the Graceful warp ready for threading, and half of a warp wound for two Very Bright baby blankets in Tahki Yarns Cotton Classic. I'll have to buy some weft to go with the blankets, but it'll put a major hole in my Cotton Classic stash!  I'm also boiling an ikat to get dyed today or tomorrow which will be towels; that gets rid of an already-pulled warp and will use up some more of my 8/2 cotton stash.

As for the rest of the crafts I aspire too, I'd like to touch on each of them in Q1. I haven't identified a list yet (and I may not)... There is some low hanging fruit:
  • The shopping bag with the embroidered panels.
  • The two additional towels that just need hemming.
  • The sheep shirt.
Things I'd like to finish/do:
  • The mosaic table in studio b.
  • Upgrading my sewing machine and trying some more embroidery (maybe that class?)
  • A new shirt pattern.
  • A shirt pattern for Scott.
  • The Shiny sweater
  • A project for the study group: I would like to take a profile draft and implement the design in bronson lace; maybe snail trail? In 18/2 cotton OR Graceful.

And I'd like to continue to use some of the images I picked up on my trips this year. Not this one. But I thought the post needed a photo!








Blue bedside rug wrap-up

Turns out weft faced wool rug weaving is a new skill, or at least a skill that eludes me.  Let me begin by saying I love the feel of the rugs; they look more attractive on the floor than on my lap; and I'll love getting out of bed and stepping on them for many years to come. But they're not to my standards and I will own needing to work on technique for further rugs. 

First of two

What's right:

  • Color choice is pleasing to me.
  • Learning opportunities were great!
  • The feel of the rugs is wonderful!

What's not right:

  • I missed a warp thread on one of the selvedges so one side has larger loops than the other. 
  • My selvedges need some practice.
  • I tried a cardwoven selvedge on the 2nd rug and I like the outcome; but I used the same color as the warp (white) and it would have been better in the rug border color. Also, I missed the part in the book where it said to pull the card weaving to the absolute edge so my runs along the back, immediately adjacent to the edge, making that rug onesided.
  • Determining how much weft to lay was difficult for me, so parts of the rug are bumpy (too much weft) and parts a bit sparse (you can see the background weft). 
  • They're actually different
    What to do with the warp selvedges? On one rug, I just darned the ends into an adjacent warp channel; on the other end, I had 2 picks of warp yarn at the end of the weaving, so I darned in the ends around that. It looks slightly better.
  • On the other rug, I tried a half damascus edge, darning the ends in as well... I think I got the knotting wrong. For it's 2nd end, I watched a lovely youtube video on the process and got the half damacus knots correct and the edge looks much better.
  • I found it difficult to get the feel of the darning correct so there are spots where it shows through and I suspect I could have cut my knots closer. I think steaming the rugs (still to be done) might help fluff the yarn and make it more attractive. 
  • Some of the darning pulls in more than other so the end of the rug is not straight.

All in all, I enjoyed the process and would like to make more rugs. However, I think I need to acknowledge that I don't effectively learn techniques from books and a class would help a lot. I found this online class that looks interesting:



And have noted this other two places for online classes: