Still Here

HI–
Bet everyone one is wondering if I’m coming back. Yes, soon I will be posting again. I’ve just been sidetracked with the preperation of sending my daughter off to college. She flies out in the morning and on Tuesday I’ll follow in the truck with all the stuff for her dorm room.

After I get home I get to settle into the empty nest and then I’ll be able to work on posts and other projects without the interruptions. So bear with me, I will be posting soon….

Delightful Dyers - July 8th

July 8th was our first official dyeing day. Silly me, I forgot my camera. The day was a trial run of what we will be doing on a regular basis. We will take three colors and mix them in different percentages to get an array of related colors. The primary colors we started with did not give us the results we were hoping for. Seems the blue was too strong and it really overpowered the yellow and to a lesser extent the red. So the 36 colors we ended up with were a nice bunch of dark blues, browns and some reds. All very dark. So much depends on the dyes you start with, the fiber you are dyeing and the percentages used.

Next month we will try the same formulas again with new primary colors to start with and a lighter depth of shade. I am looking forward to getting a library of color recipes to start dyeing my own tencel yarn for weaving projects. I’ll also remember my camera and add a picture of the first dye results to this later.

Catching Up

I always seem to be trying to finish several projects at once. Or should I say, ignoring several projects while I am working on one that has caught my attention at the moment. I need to be doing several things and right now the one that is keeping my attention most of the time is weaving off the workshop warp from the baby wolf.

A few months ago, we had Bonnie Inouye come to town for the Guilds annual weaving workshop. The topic was “Advance” and what a wonderful time we had. I still had warp on the loom when I came home and decided to weave a couple of simple cotton scarves. This is the second one I am working on and if I would just get motivated, it could be taken off the loom today.

I think I will add some beads to the fringe to dress these up a bit.

Advancing Twill

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Bobbin Lace Bookmarks

I’m so excited. I dug the lace pillow out from under the table it has been hiding under for the last year and a half. I decided I wanted to make up a supply of bookmarks that I could give as gifts. It is nice to have a supply because you never know when you might need one.

The pillow was so dusty, I didn’t cover it properly when I stopped using it and I still need to work on removing more dust. I decided not to wait and found a simple bookmark pattern I had done once before.

bobbin lace pillow
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Bead Leno

Leno Weave is the general term applied to a weave structure in which some of the warp threads do not lie parallel with, but are twisted partly around other threads. It is also know as gauze weave. In the process of weaving a leno fabric, the warp threads are pulled out of their normal straight line in the cloth. They are pulled off the either the right or left of the warp thread next to them and held in that position by the weft thread.

The method of interlacing results in several features peculiar to leno weaves. Leno weaves have an open work effect since the threads to not lie parallel to each other in the fabric. A leno or gauze fabric will have an open or lace-like appearance, be light in weight and yet posses sufficient strength to wear well. Leno fabrics have a zigzag effect, due to the twisting of the ends. This effect is more noticeable in fancy gauze weaves that in plain gauze.

leno weave
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Old Draft Comes to Life

Today I finished warping my 24 harness AVL loom. It seemed to take me forever to get this warp on the loom. I kept putting off working on it since I was a bit nervous about what I was doing. The draft came from a weaving book published in 1740 in Germany. The book is “Nutzliches Weber-Bild-Buch (Weaver’s Tie-up Book)” and was written by Johann Michael Frickinger. I have a translation of the book and have found some very nice weaving drafts in it and other old resources.

The fabric is a plain weave background with a supplemental weft pattern. Not too fancy or complicated, just different than what I have done before. Read the rest of this entry »

Huck Lace

Soon after I started weaving I discovered a very nice weave structure known as ‘Huck Lace’. It is primarily a plain-weave cloth with either warp floats, weft floats, or a combination of both. Floats are made when the warp or weft is not woven in the plain-weave fashion, but lays on top or under the cloth for 3 or 5 threads depending on the type of huck lace you are weaving. In the diagram below shows the areas of ‘plain-weave’ and areas where either the warp and weft threads are not caught in the plain-weave structure. This is a five-thread huck meaning the warp or weft will skip over or under five threads before it will return into the plain-weave structure. In the areas where there are blocks of warp floats next to blocks of weft floats, the fabric is very loosely woven and there will be open lacy places in the cloth. This type of lacy area is much less obvious in three-thread huck patterns.

huck lace diagram

Huck lace fabric can be used for several things. I have woven curtains for my kitchen and my daughter’s room. I have a red table cloth woven in huck lace that gets used during the holidays. A special project happened when one of my step-daughters had her first child. I wove huck lace fabric and her mother made a christening gown for the baby. Soon I would like to weave baby blankets using cotton and the huck lace patterns I have been developing.

I also weave kitchen towels from 8/2 cotton using huck lace patterns. The towels are very absorbent and wash up nicely. I get a kick out of watching them slurp up the water left on the ‘top’ of things after the dishwasher has stopped. Take a look at the huck lace towels I have on my web site.

Hand Towel? Dish Towel? Kitchen Towel?

I have been having a real long debate with myself over this. What is the difference between a hand towel, a kitchen towel, a dish towel, or even a tea towel? I grew up with dish towels in the kitchen at home and hand towels in the bath room. I don’t think I ever met a kitchen towel and a tea towel was never mentioned.

Why am I curious? Well, I have handwoven cotton towels that could be used as hand towels in the bath, dish towels in the pantry, kitchen towels in the kitchen, or tea towels in the parlor, and I don’t know which to call them.

Does the size of the towel make the difference, maybe the type of material it is woven from, or is it location, location, location? I’m curious about what the rest of the world calls them. Take a look at the cotton towels I weave and let me know what you would name them.

I look forward to your comments!

Vila

‘Delightful Dyers’ is born

After the May meeting of the Handweavers Guild of Boise Valley, a new study group was formed. During the first planning session the group acquired the name ‘Delightful Dyers’. We are about to embark on an adventure of dyeing tencel yarn. The study group will meet once a month. It should be a fun group to work with.

I am looking forward to learning more about the dye process and can’t wait to create custom colored yarn for future weaving projects. Stay tuned for updates on the adventures of the ‘Delightful Dyers’.

Vila

Welcome to My Handwoven Thoughts

I thought this would be a good way to let everyone know what I am working on and to keep you all updated in my advertures with the ‘Delightful Dyers’. I hope you learn something about weaving and share my excitment in the discoveries to come.

Vila Cox

www.warpedandwonderful.com

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