Friday, February 28, 2014

Canaan Flowers Breakthrough


Weaving Cloth for Coats

From an admirer:
"I loved your woven jacket.  It seems so magical to have some yarn, weave it and then make a jacket.
Your creations are like a caterpiller that turns into a beautiful butterfly.  
I never could have imagined the yarn in anything but a sweater or scarf or something knitted or crocheted."

Long ago I wove this art piece.
I think I was telling myself I would like to weave cloth for coats ... or jackets. 

Olympic Weaving

The shuttle was my bobsled, the race was to the end of the warp!
During the Olympics, I set up a warp called Canaan Flowers from Marguerite Davison's weaving book. Because I am a novice to weaving, I chose this pattern as a stretch because it called for five treadles, something I had never done before. Following the charts as accurately as possible, it ended up that the raised part of the design emerged on the underside, like sliding blind.  Because my yarns were not high in contrast, keeping track of the pattern sequence was a bit of a challenge, like the skeleton sledders who have to have the curves memorized and in muscle memory, or the giant slalom skiers peering through the fog trying not to miss the giant slalom gates. My eyes blurred, struggling to make out the boundaries. I sometimes had to remove several rows to get back on track. By the time I arrived at the finish line of the warp, I'd figured out how to reorganize the treadlings to get the design on top. The sun shone! However this no longer mattered much, because the last length was mostly tabby.  Color and proportion became my new moguls.
"Flowers of Canaan" pattern just off the loom

close up - some "Rebecca's Tweed" yarn in the weft


BLOCKING: the white is a handspun by me BFL and Shropshire wool blend
the brown and green warp is a wonderful vintage cotton 

the shawl on the left was blocked, the one on the right was steamed

Jean Lilly










This is woven in the Jean Lilly pattern on the warp
and color variation stripes using only two yarns -
 buit it looks like more!

the dress to go with the jacket - or not!








Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Winter Weaving: Color Texture Order Joy

For my most recent warp 
I set up a large overshot based on a pattern called 
 Double Irish Chain 
on page 52 of Marguerite Davison.
I used a vintage cotton yarn that I inherited from a friend.
For the filling, in my effort to use up old bits 
accumulated over more than thirty years of knitting and crochet, 
I spun remnants with BFL (Blue-faced Leicester) wool fiber
 to make what I now call my "Rebecca Tweed."
 It was new for me to spin unspun fiber 
on top on plied finished yarns, but I finally got the feel.  
I also used the beautiful green mohair and mohair blend from
Grand Isle Art WorksYellow Dog Farm in Vermont, 
Evergreen Shetland weaving yarn from the Woolery in Kentucky,
 and Icelandic Lopi from The Warm Ewe in Chatham, NY bought several years ago. 
For the most part I used the vintage cotton for the dobby weave portions of the overshot.
Rebecca Tweed Yarn


Ready to go

view from under the beam showing the tie-on


just off the loom

steamed and pressed - after a bit of fulling

I planned to cut this up to make a skirt but now I will keep it as a throw!


This design used the Rebecca Tweed
it makes me think of a garden in the spring





just off the loom - using Icelandic Lopi yarn that once was bought for Mirette Doll hair - reverse side
... in its new home



front side. Piece is about 30" by 35"
I like the subtle central plaid



mini experiments at the end of the run