Comments

jeannine (not verified)

I like this one. the colours look very harmonious and the rooving gives nice accents.

 

Finished Length Unit
yards
Finished Width Unit
yards
Length Off Loom Unit
yards
Length on Loom Unit
yards
Notes

 

What a fun project! I LOVE SAORI WEAVING!

For years I have approached weaving by carefully planning and calculating and by learning different weave structures. This project was pure joy.

It took very little time to wind a 5” warp but I didn’t know how wide it was until I threaded the reed -- I wound about 6 yards (didn’t measure) of a variety of yarns in my stash. The majority of the warp yarns were wool of different weights and textures… worsted weight, singles, boucle and then I added some cotton 5/2 in black just to see what would happen when wet finished.

I have been spinning for about 38 years and some of the handspun I used in the weft were from that long ago! Some of it was spun from fiber I picked up when I visited a woolen mill in Wales 35 years ago! Each yarn has a story behind it! I used some beautiful white alpaca roving that a friend just gave me as textural accents. I used various lengths that I pulled off the balls randomly and wove them into the web by hand playing with clasped weft tapestry and experimented with multiple threads in the same shed. I PLAYED!

Part of what made it so much fun and so "freeing" was turning my 8 shaft Mighty Wolf into a 4 shaft directly tied up loom. I dropped the tie-up cords on the treadles on either side of the 4 center treadles so that I could easily find the treadles I wanted to use with my feet. I tied each treadle up to one shaft only. (direct tie-up)  That way I could treadle one or two at a time and dance with my feet.

I can’t wait to work on the 2nd scarf on this warp.

 

Number of Shafts
4
Number of Treadles
4
Project Status
Finished
Sett Unit
epi
Width off Loom Unit
inches
Width on Loom Unit
inches