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Friday Weaver’s Journal – The End Is Nigh!

Knoontime Knitting
I’m at the end!  I’m at the end!  I can’t turn the weaving any more than it is.  I’m so excited!

This is prior to the end, where you can see the dowel rod.  It’s supposed to be straight.  o.O…  It doesn’t appear to have affected the weaving negatively, thank the gods.

This is a shot from farther away, after I’ve moved the dowel off the back beam and then moved farther.

Isn’t this pattern awesome?  I’m so excited.  It looks awesome.  I’m looking forward to using the next colorway to begin the Belii Shawl.

This is the last little bit of the warp.  We’ll cut the fabric off the loom and then tie the new yarn to it and pull it through.
This shot is taken from some distance so you can see the fabric’s sheen.

Here’s the fabric.  I didn’t take it off the beam because I finished just as class ended, and I didn’t want to have to rush.  So, next week, we’ll have the fabric reveal and start sewing. o.O…

—
“It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
– E.E. Cummings

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Check out BURNING BRIGHT, available from Samhain Publishing.
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Watch for TIGER TIGER, coming July, 2013, from Samhain Publishing.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Chicago Weaving School, Weaving

Happy Stashbusting New Year!

Knoontime Knitting

Welcome to 2013!  365 days to knit, crochet, weave, or play with your favorite craft; 52 weeks of inspired ideas; 12 months of possibility; 4 seasons filled with opportunities for enjoyment; it’s a brand new year, kids, and we ain’t gettin’ any younger!  So LET’S GET BIZZY!

My theme for this year is Completion.  Here’s my plan of attack:

  • Define the parameters (i.e. what is my stash, exactly?)
  • Define the weaponry (i.e. what tools do I have, and what, if any, are needed?)
  • Easy wins (what’s already started or nearly done?)
  • Planned Campaigns (what’s already planned but not yet executed?)
  • Contingencies (what can we come up with that’s new?)
There’s a lot of play to do this year.  Today I’m finishing the Celebration of Light and Color Shawl (it just needs to be washed and blocked), and working on the diamond wrap.  Weaving class is Thursday and Michael and I are planning our next item for the Wardrobe of 2013.
What about you?  What yearnings have you got buried in your little crafty heart?  Trust that today is the day, and this is the year.  Craft on!
Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Knitting Projects, Weaving

It’s All About the Fabric

Knoontime Knitting

I am weaving on a Schact table loom that’s been converted to a floor loom.  It is an eight-harness loom, but I’m only using four of the harnesses.  Unlike my previous project, which I wove on a four harness table loom, this loom uses floor pedals to control the raising and lowering of the heddles.  If you remember, the heddles are what control which warp threads are up or down for each pass of the shuttle; this is what creates the weave structure (like, for example, a houndstooth pattern or herringbone).

For my Quesquemitl, which is a type of shawl and poncho, I am weaving a 2-2 twill:  this means that 2 harnesses are up and 2 harnesses are down for each pass of the shuttle.  Twills are characterized by movement, meaning that the patterns are created by something called a “twill circle.”  This is in contrast to a balanced weave, like plain weave or basketweave.  (If you made potholders as a child, that is plain weave:  an equal amount of threads on the warp and the weft, and an equal weight to both.)

Here are some pictures that will illustrate what I’m talking about.

Here is a view of the fabric.  The bottom two-thirds of the image is the actual fabric, and you can see the diagonal striping leading from the bottom right to the top left.  This is the characteristic of the twill family of weave structures.  Beyond the fabric, at the top of the image, are the warp threads waiting to be woven.  The warp is a darker tonal family than the weft (the warp are the vertical threads, the weft are the horizontal ones); the combination of the two is surprisingly pleasing.

Here is a closeup of the same fabric, showing the apparent ‘movement’ of the fabric.  This fabric is a 2-2 twill, which means two warp threads are up, and two are down, for each pass of the shuttle.  For the weavers among you, I’m using a floating selvage for this project, which is a first for me; I like the edges very much.  They’re a lot cleaner than my last project, where I didn’t use them.

Here is a view of the fabric unwound from the front beam; I included my hand in the shot so you can get perspective on the sizing.  I’m holding this fairly taut; in the next image, you can see more of the drape.

It feels a little bit like denim, but much softer.  It’s a rayon blend and I love it.  As I weave, it creates a lot of fuzz; I hope that isn’t a property of the finished fabric after blocking.

As I mentioned earlier, the heddles are controlled on this loom by foot pedals.  The cool thing is that the foot pedals are variable:  you select which heddles correspond with which pedal.  For my project, you can see there is an A, a B, and 1 through 4.  A and B are set up for plain weave, and the 1 through 4 are set up as a 2-2 twill.  That means that for each pedal, two heddles are controlled – this way, I just have to press 1 through 4 in succession and I have my pattern.

I’ll admit that was very difficult for me to grasp when I first sat down to weave on this loom; my instructor set up the heddles.  The geometry of it just refused to penetrate my brain (I think it’s that old 2-D/3-D problem).  But now that I’ve woven this project on it, and am nearing completion, it makes a lot more sense.

Here is a view of the back beam, for those of you curious to see where the warp goes.  The left foreground shows the warp threads traveling over the back beam and down onto the roller.  The gray paper is there to keep successive rolls of the threads from knotting across each other; each layer is protected by paper (or one could use clear plastic or even newsprint, whatever is handy).

This final image is the boat shuttle, so named because the bobbin of thread sits inside the shuttle on a peg.  This allows the weaver to load multiple bobbins and not have to get up each time the end of the thread is reached.  It’s taken a little bit to get used to how wide this loom is; my last project wasn’t this wide.  But once I got the hang of it, it’s rather fun to whiz back and forth.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Four Harness Loom, Weaving

News from the World of Weave

Knoontime Knitting

I continue to attend weaving classes at the Chicago Weaving School, which in turn continues to grow and prosper.  Founder and Instructor Natalie Boyett conceived yet another excellent idea called WeaveSpa – single weaving classes with a pre-dressed loom or packages of lessons for very reasonable prices.  It’s a great way for people to dip a toe into the weaving world without having to take an expensive and time-consuming plunge.  (It’s also a great way to get hooked on the weaving addiction, but that’s beside the point…) 

The first WeaveSpa is February 2, 2011.  Check it out on Facebook.

As for what the heck I’m weaving, I’m weaving a Quesquemitl!

Say huh?

A Quesquemitl!

Nope, doesn’t make sense to me either, other than it’s a Mestizo shawl thingie.  It’s pretty cool.  Here’s a pic:

The schematic on the left is the drawing of what you weave:  it’s a long rectangle with fringe on the ends.  I think I might add some clear crystal beads to the ends of fringe and macrame them in some fashion; we’ll see.  I don’t have to decide that til next week. 

Why next week?   BECAUSE I’M NEARLY DONE!!!  I’m so excited.  Here is a picture of the loom I’m using; you can see the fabric in the front wound around the beam and the threads on the back with the knots sticking out – those knots are the end of the warp!  That means I only have a few more inches that I can weave before I’m all finished!

And since a friend of mine asked me about what the school is like, and I realized I haven’t posted any pictures, here are some views of the school.

‘My’ loom is in the back on the left.  In the foreground on the left is another floor loom, and the yellow threads are the warp of what will be a blanket.  The bookshelves are the weaving library, and the odd shapes on the right are, in the foreground, my jacket over a chair and behind that my classmate’s coat hanging on the corner stantion of a giant floor loom.

The left is the back of that same enormous floor loom, then the back door that leads to the other room of the school, a long hallway and the all-important restroom.  What you can’t see is there’s a little bit on the right where there’s a sink and more shelves with looms.  In the foreground on the right is the castle of another loom; what you’re looking at are the levers that control the harnesses.

This is looking toward the front of the school.  The center table is the main worktable, and looks different each time I come depending which students will be working.  When not in use, those table looms go on shelves.  On the left is a floor loom with a blue warp; beyond it are three more floor looms and a large wooden contraption for winding lengths of warp threads.  It’s got a name but I can’t call it to mind at the moment.

It’s a fun shop, full of electric and creative energy.  The students are just as interesting as the instructor; I’ve really enjoyed the time I spend here and look forward to many more days weaving here.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Four Harness Loom, Weaving

Weaving! Harness the Power…

Knoontime Knitting

Sorry, weaver’s joke.  (Harnesses hold the heddles, which are how the fabric is made… get it?  Yeah, it’s not that funny.)  (MAN, maybe I need to get out more.)

ANYWAY.  So, I’m going to give an update in reverse order of my weaving progress.  Why?

Because it’s Friday?

I went to class yesterday and did some more work on my placemats.  I am learning to make balanced-weave patterns and twill, which is actually kind of fun once you get the hang of it.

However, THIS was my view on the train.  Talk about PACKED – this dude’s butt was in my face, practically.  I mean, nice butt, but jeez.  I’m sorta married, and anyway, I’m not gonna sample the merchandise on the train without asking first, and it’s sorta public, an’ all…

But riding the train is sometimes like you and four million of your closest, smelly friends all mashed into a sardine tin on metal squealing wheels.

On to the weaving:

This is the breast beam of the loom, which sits toward the weaver.  My instructor jokes that is because it’s where you put your breasts.  ~smirk~

Mine are a leetle big for that…

The balanced weave is every other strand of the warp (the vertical threads) is lifted, and the weft goes in between them.  There are as many threads vertically per inch as there are horizontally, which is why it’s called a balanced weave. 

The thing I’m learning about this art, is that it’s very logical.  The explanations make a lot of sense and aren’t like trying to figure out calculus.  Once you get familiar with the terms (warp, weft, shot, shed, etc.), then it’s much easier to understand.

These are the three yarns that I’m using for this project.  The other two, which I used for the warp, (the vertical threads that are tied into the loom itself), are a dark rose and an ivory.  These threads are used for the weft, the horizontal threads.  Starting at the center and moving clockwise, the dark blue is for the narrow stripe that runs across the width of each single placemat and intersects with the narrow strip I wound into the dark rose warp.

The light blue is a very narrow gauge yarn that is used to make the hem allowance between each placemat.  My instructor had me use this narrow thread so that the woven area for the hem won’t be as thick as the main fabric.

The pink is the thread I’m using for the main part of the weft.  When it’s woven, as you can see from the other photographs, it’s much less PINK and makes a nice blend with the dark rose and ivory.

Also in this image are several of the tools I used.  Again, going clockwise and starting next to the dark blue thread is the “boat” shuttle, since it looks like a little canoe and the bobbin sits inside it, like a canoe.  Next is the tape measure, used to check the width of the textures that I’m weaving.  I am weaving balanced weave for four inches, then a pattern weave, then balanced, etc.

The book I recently purchased on the recommendation of my teacher, Learning to Weave.  I like it.  It’s very easy to understand and set up like a class itself, so it adapts well to use in lessons.

This is showing the measurement of the narrow band in between the two mats.  As I mentioned above, I used the narrow light blue thread to weave this portion; as you can see, it’s a great deal narrower than the main pink thread.

Here is a view of the twill that I wove.  I love the diagonal look of this weave and if I needed to select a pattern to weave all over a design, this would probably be the one I’d select.

My instructor had some leftover yarn, so I’m going to knit her a scarf in a new cable pattern, from my new book by Barbara Walker, A Fourth Treasury of Knitting Patterns.  I’m going to attempt “Cable #2.”

We shall see how this experiment goes in future articles.  For now, have a Happy Labor Day weekend and enjoy your craft!

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Four Harness Loom, Weaving

Final Day of First Session, June 24th

Knoontime Knitting

My final day of class, and I’m hooked.  I will definitely sign up for the four-harness class, and even have purchased my first instructional book:  Learning to Weave, by Deborah Chandler.  It only just arrived today, so I don’t have an update, but I’m excited to feel like a ‘real’ student.

So, on to the last day of my first set of class:
These images show the fabric all the way up to near completion; I also have some images of the fabric off the loom but I’ll save those for another post.

This shows the rest of the greens and the aquas that I used.  At this point, I’m starting to actually run out of warp, which I didn’t think would happen.  I’m disappointed to not have more to test the colors on, actually.

Here is a close-up of the light green.  The little string sticking up is actually woven into the fabric at the sides when you change colors, then clipped at the end of the process.  I started clipping once they wove in, so I didn’t have as much to do when I pulled the fabric off the loom, which is something I’ll continue to do.

Here is the finished product, with the exception of actually coming off the loom.  It shows all the way through the indigo; I didn’t have enough room to work through the purple/violet tones of the spectrum.  You can see how different each of the stripes looks as it progresses through the spectrum on the warp; this is a good exercise in seeing how colors interact in fabric.  They do so quite differently than when knitting.

Here is another view of the same segment of fabric.  In this view, it seems much more plaid-like.  There are some interactions that I didn’t expect to like but really do, including the red and green and the center sections.

You can see a couple things in this image.  One is how many threads there are when you don’t clip as you go – which is why I decided to do so.  The other is how really bright that one band of orange is.  Part of that is because the acrylic fiber is much brighter in tone than the wool, and the strand was a lot looser so when I packed it, it packed very tightly and ended up letting the weft dominate in that segment.

This is the final piece, all wound back on, ready to go back to class to take the fabric off the loom.  I ended with a clear royal blue, since I couldn’t get all the way into the violets.  Not a bad day’s work – well, really, four days’ work!

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Rigid Heddle Loom, Weaving

Weaving, June 17th

Knoontime Knitting

Back to the workshop!  June 17th was my third session at the Chicago Weaving School.  I made some good headway with my weaving, though I had some trouble getting the beating consistent.  Stress really made a difference in how I interacted with the fabric, which I found interesting.

In this view, you can see in the bottom left corner of the image how the same color in the weft as in the warp comes out in the fabric.  Remember that the warp are the threads that are tied onto the loom, and the warp are the threads the weaver passes back and forth.  (Warp = vertical, weft = horizontal.) 

For the detail-oriented, there is a stripe in the bottom third where I forgot to more the heddle and there are two weft rows right next to each other, making a wider stripe of color than usual.

Here is a close-up of the heddle with the warp passing through.  The purple paper wrapping around the back beam keeps the threads from tangling up with each other.  As you can see, the last red thread is falling off the edge of it; we found that with this loom, it’s better to not go all the way to the horizontal edge when weaving because that seems to happen.

Here is a front view of the loom with the fabric; there’s quite a bit finished already.  The two clamps hold the loom to the table – which, having forgotten them the next lesson, I have decided are very necessary.  It keeps the loom from jumping back and forth.

Here is the weaving with thread already on the spool for the weft; we’ve progressed up to green tones at this point.

Same view, but from the back of the loom instead.  There is a cone of thread in the extreme left of the image, along with my notebook tracking which colors I used in the piece.

More of the green, this time with the heddle in neutral position for traveling.  When the heddle is in the neutral position, it lays the threads on top of each other.  If you set the spool inside the shed before you do that, then it closes over it to allow it to stay in place.

Another shot, this time horizontally across the top of the warp, showing the heddle in neutral position.  You can see the unevenness I mentioned in the yellow section right in front of the camera; it’s rather wavy here.  The edges also waver in and out from this day’s weaving.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Rigid Heddle Loom, Weaving

Weaving Update

Knoontime Knitting

As I’ve discussed in prior posts on weaving, I’ve been working on learning the Cricket loom, a rigid heddle loom.  I have successfully taken the fabric off the loom and it is now a table runner in my dining room!  It’s exciting.  It turns out that weaving is only part of the tale…
Once one is finished weaving, the finishing process is critical to the success of the fabric.  My instructor says that an unfinished weaving is like an unbaked cake.  You can finish by pressing or washing (or both); we finished mine by steaming it with an iron but not pressing it flat (in order to not crush the weave).

This is a picture of the front of the loom, with the breast beam.  The threads are tied on now, and are prepared for weaving the ‘header.’  This is a part of the weaving that will not be used in the final fabric, and will pull the warp threads into alignment.

The flat plastic grid that the threads are pulled through is called the heddle.  In this loom, which is a rigid heddle loom, the heddle is moved by hand up and down.  In a four-harness loom, the heddles are controlled by levers and springs (which will make more sense when I get some pictures up on that topic, later).

This view shows the header, which is woven in white, and the beginning of the weaving.  If you recall, I wove a color ‘gamp,’ which is a sampler piece that shows the properties of the weaving.  A color gamp is to show how the colors interact; a texture gamp shows the various types of stitches.  I decided to do this one in the colors of the spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet), as well as brown, black and white.  This would let me see how each of those colors interact with each other.

My instructor suggested I use shades of each of those tones, which is what I did.  It made an interesting effect in the weave.

Here is a top view of the warp with the threads coming through the heddle.  You can see that there is a hole in the center of the heddle, as well as gaps in between, and one thread comes through each.

These are the red tones as they’re woven on.  I like the plaid effect as they get woven.

This shows the cones of yarn waiting to be used.  My gamp is made with wool that’s spun especially for weaving.  The weight is a good deal lighter than knitting yarn (about a lace weight), and a lot stronger to withstand the repeated beatings it takes when in the warp.

Another view of the red tones, with the warp extending off to the upper left of the photograph.

Closeup of starting the orange segment.  This is what’s called a ‘plain weave,’ which is where every other thread of the warp is lifted and the weft is passed through.  Other patterns can be made by moving the warp differently, but those patterns are easier on a harness loom because the heddles can be controlled more precisely.

This is another view of the weaving, where the heddle is brought toward the weaver to ‘beat’ the threads into the warp.  It’s a meditative, repetitive action:  pass, beat, pass, beat.  Depending on how hard the weaver beats the fabric, it will change the density of the weaving (which we’ll see later on when I switched to a different fiber and  ended up with a weft-dominated band).

A close-up of the selvege.  The goal in weaving is to get a very neat edge, which I found is a lot harder than it sounds.  It’s composed of how you beat the fibers in, which can vary based on the mood of the weaver (and it’s interesting to see the differences from class session to session).

As you can see from the very bright orange band, above, the switch in fiber meant that when I beat it into the weaving, it REALLY packed down.  That stripe is VERY orange. 

Now we are moving into the yellows.  I like the rust tones in this section.

Interesting how the whole tone of the piece is changed in just a few stripes.  This section is much cooler and softer, because of the change in the color.  Again, you can see how much closer the current segment beats into the fabric, resulting in a more weft-dominated band.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Rigid Heddle Loom, Weaving

Weaving, Woven, Fabric!

Knoontime Knitting

I’ve been weaving, as I mentioned in my article “Weaving!”  My fourth class was tonight and I’m nearly done!  I’ll need to finish the actual fabric coming off the loom in my next lesson, which will be the first in a series of learning how to use a four harness loom.  But I unwound the fabric today and… my goodness!  It’s really long!

The Cricket is portable!  It fits well inside a Peapod bag, and isn’t very heavy.  It’s a little unwieldy, but I was able to carry it on the train without too much fuss.

This is the fully-dressed loom, with the warp all wrapped around the beam.

I decided to look down inside the bag, just to show how compact this little guy is.  I’m also amazed by how big the Peapod bag is.  ~grin~

I’ll post more later, about the beginning process of the weaving, the yarns I used, and the ending process – with the finished fabric – after I get some sleep.

Happy weaving!

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Rigid Heddle Loom, Weaving

Weaving!

Knoontime Knitting

As some of you know, I’ve recently purchased a Cricket Rigid Heddle Loom. I didn’t post an update on it when I bought it, but I’ve been collecting weaving books (there aren’t a huge number for the rigid heddle loom, but there are a few).

Last night, I took my first class at the Chicago Weaving School! It was great fun. Natalie Boyett is a great instructor. If you are ever in the Chicago area and have thought of weaving, this is the place for you. She has actual dressed looms that you can use without having to work through the setup process, and thus can see if it’s even something you’d like to try or not. But believe me, it’s fun!

I’ve taken a couple pictures of dressing the loom, and wanted to share my experiences.

First, one has to put the loom together. I didn’t think to take before pix, but it was a challenge for me since I don’t translate 2-D to 3-D very well. But if you don’t have that problem, it’s easy, and even if you DO have that problem, I was able to follow the instructions and get things going.

Once the loom is put together, the next step is to dress it, or “warp” it. The warp are the long continuous threads in the fabric, the weft are the crossways ones. The Cricket comes with two skeins of Lion Brand Wool Ease, which would work, but Natalie suggested I try some weaving yarns and do a color sampler. Color interacts much differently with weaving than knitting, so I followed her advice.

My loom is ten inches wide on the warp surface, with eight pins to the inch – think of that as the gauge. The eight pins are one inch wide, so there are ten sets of eight across width – giving me ten colors, each one inch wide, to work with.

We went left to right, the colors of the spectrum (remember Roy G. Biv from art class? if not, read on and I’ll explain it) as well as black, brown and ivory. Roy G. Biv is a mnemonic to remember the colors of the visible spectrum, or, in layman’s language, the colors of the rainbow. They are Red, Orange, Yellow (Roy), Green (G.), Blue, Indigo and Violet (Biv).

Here’s what the loom looks like half dressed, with the warp threads still wound around the warping peg:


A view from the top, looking at the back of the loom, is here:


This particular warp will be the length of the table (and as I’m typing, I realize that I neglected to measure that, but I’d guess around five feet or 60 inches). If I wanted something longer, I would use a warping board.

We did finish dressing the loom last night, but it was very late so I didn’t take pictures. I will post another update once I get some more pictures to share.

Posted in Knoontime Knitting - One Writer's Journey Into 3-D | Tagged A. Catherine Noon, acatherinenoon, Rigid Heddle Loom, Weaving

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