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Really??? 7???

Brioschi

Although I don’t go through much in a year, not more than a dozen foil packets, Brioschi is far and away my effervescent antacid of choice. Originally made in Italy. And now discontinued.

I have only a few of their foil packets left (which I much prefer to the bottle since they stay fresh). So figured I’d better search around for an alternative. After reading a bunch of customer reviews, it looked like my best bet was Galeffi, also originated in Italy.

So I ordered a bottle now to check it out and make sure I had some on hand. It came in yesterday’s mail. In a padded Priority Mail envelope.

I opened the envelope and there was another padded Priority Mail envelope. And another. And another. It was like an Alice in Wonderland experience…would I ever get to the inside? It took a long time.

padded shipping bags

There were 7 of them, each inside another! 7! While the Galeffi bottle is glass, I hardly think it needed 7 padded bags to protect it during shipping.

Being the person I am, now I’ll have to find ways to use them. I can’t just throw them away.

Although my stomach was fine last night, I had to open the bottle and try 1/2 dose of the Galeffi to taste it. It was okay. Not Brioschi, but way better than Alka Seltzer.

Changing Colors

I’ve gotten lots of weaving done in the past few days. In fact, I finished weaving JS’s wrap and am more than halfway through YY’s first wrap.

I had a bunch of knots in the warp threads so had to replace them. That meant hanging repair threads, each of which required some attention every time I’d woven 7 or 8 inches. So my preference is to wait until I get to the end of one piece — one wrap in this case — and switch out the repair thread with the original warp thread, long past the offending knot. I bring that original thread over the back beam, through the heddle & reed, and pin it to the fabric.

replacement warp threads

I had five repair threads in this warp and couldn’t wait to be done with them.

In the next picture you can see the end of JS’s burgundy tencel weft and the beginning of YY’s seafoam Egyptian cotton weft. (Although I’ve gotten a bunch of decently colored pics of late, neither of these are. I tried all the tricks I’ve used successfully for the past few weeks, but couldn’t get anything good this time.)

burgundy to seafoam wefts

The arrows point to where I’ve cut the leftover warp threads. Honestly, I usually leave them longer than I did here. I thought I could make them disappear for the picture, but that’s not the case. I’m not worried about unraveling because as soon as the fabric comes off the loom it will go to my sewing machine where I’ll sew a few lines in preparation for cutting & hemming.

I’m pushing to get these wraps finished because I have to do another warp on this loom that will hopefully be for my jurying.

As an aside, I tried more things this time and have decided that the live weight system isn’t compatible with my baby wrap warps. I weave these wraps under high tension and simply cannot achieve that with the live weights. At least not with my current knowledge.

The Skinny

When I’m measuring the warp for my baby wraps, I have to make 4 ’bouts’ or groups of threads. Each bout is roughly 190 threads wide. Not only is that the capacity of my warping mill, but wider bouts tend to cause beaming problems.

I take those bouts over to the loom, insert the lease sticks (here they’re 2 small PVC pipes – so smooth that no threads EVER catch on them), thread them on to a rod and tie the rod to the back beam. Here’s how the warp for JS & YY looked at that point.

JS & YL's warp, skinny

The next step is spreading the warp to the correct width, using a tool called a raddle. (That’s the board with the nails in it, which I’ve clamped to the loom with Irwin Quick Clamps). I’ve done that here.

JS & YL's warp, spread in the raddle

From left to right, the warp colors are turquoise, pale green, pale yellow, peach, pale pink, and dark pink. Looks like a selection of sorbets to me. Yum!

After that I use my warping valet to beam the warp – that is, wind it on the back beam under tension. Got that done today, too. I’ll start threading tomorrow.

Counting

At the end of each calendar year I have to do a lot of counting. Counting more than 200 cones, pounds, and skeins of yarn, over 150 finished pieces of weaving, and a remarkable amount of beads and precious metals left from my jewelry-making days, especially given how much I’ve already sold.

I gather all sorts of costs that haven’t yet been entered into my QuickBooks and/or Excel programs. All of this in preparation for taxes. I dread these tasks so try to get them done in the week between Christmas & New Year so they don’t weight on my mind. Just get ’em done. All I have to do now is wait for the W2s and 1099s to come in.

After all the counting of things, I started what I was counting on being one of the pieces for my jurying this year. In mid-December I had placed the order for the next batch of yarn for baby wraps. One cone was out of stock and expected in any day, but with the holidays everything took longer than usual. So I did a bunch of planning in my weaving software to make some rayon turned taquete shawls. I spent hours figuring it out, doing my best to match the colors of yarn I had.

taquete shawl weaving draft 1

I thought I’d try the live weight system with the shawl, since it was both a bit narrower than the baby wraps and needed substantially less tension. Initially it wasn’t great, with the ropes continuing to slip on the back beam. I’d already taken several steps to rough up my warp beam to prevent this, but it still didn’t work. Then I remembered something my creative-thinking son suggested several weeks ago as a resolution: wet the rope. Although I had to do it a few times during the weaving, it worked great!

live weights on shawl

One of the real benefits of the live weight system is that you can be certain that the tension will be exactly the same for the entire length of the weaving. It’s also surprising how much quicker it is to advance the warp. So I was really glad it worked and I’m hoping the water plus some heavier weights will do the track for the next baby wrap warp.

Anyway, I started weaving and had to walk away from the loom several times. Too many broken warp threads! Frustrating! And since I wanted one of these shawls to be good enough for jurying, broken warp threads on the edges did not make for straight selvedges. Still I finished the shawl and, although I haven’t yet wet finished, I’m quite sure that the shawl will be fine to sell, if not to jury. (The color’s something between the draft image above and the photo of the shawl below.)

taquete squares rayon shawl

Still, I thought I needed to simplify for jurying photos; the squares might be too…busy? Unsophisticated? Something else? So I went back to the computer and played with other alternatives for using weft colors. I settled on this and went back to the loom.

taquete shawl weaving draft 2

Warp threads seemed to have fewer breaks for the second shawl, although still far more than acceptable. I’ve now marked the remaining yarn for use as weft only. Again, I still have to wet finish, but I’m happy with the overall look of this shawl and think it’s classier than the first.

taquete rayon  shawl-single weft

As I was finishing at the loom, the mailman came with the cotton for the baby wraps. Good timing. I’ll start winding that warp tomorrow. Then I’ll make one or two more pieces for jurying, work on more baby wraps, finish up the jurying pieces. The work never stops. Fortunately, I’m doing what I’ve chosen to do, what I like to do, setting my own schedule and working in my home. As Dear Abby said, “It’s only work if you’d rather be doing something else.”

Christmas Gifts

I promised to show you the gifts I made for adults for Christmas. It started with a request from my daughter for a pair of knitted boot cuffs. I like doing cables, so I figured all I had to do was get some idea of the number of stitches I needed and design some cables. Easy peasy. I knit them in 2 colors so she can decide if she wants light or dark to show.

I wasn’t satisfied with just one pair. But I didn’t want to make them in the same pattern. I floated around the web looking for another pattern I thought would look good, and settled on this waffle weave. Again, knit it in 2 colors.

knitted boot cuffs

Despite how they look, the cable knit has 2 MORE stitches around than the waffle knit. I assured my daughter that I’d re-knit either pair if they didn’t fit…so far, so good.

Moving on, I’d seen a scarf in the Signals catalog that spurred an idea…I can make something like that, I said. So I went to Joann’s and bought some faux fur and got out my sewing machine. The way to sew it in real life wasn’t the way it was in my mind, so I had to take some stitching out and do the finish hand sewing differently than planned, but overall it was relatively quick & easy.

fur infinity scarf

Then, I decided I’d weave a rayon chenille scarf each for my son & son-in-law. I used 2 grays & a black for the warp. Gray weft for one, black weft for the other.

gray & black rayon chenille scarves

I also gifted a bunch of my handwoven towels. No more shots of them here – you’ve already seen them.

I was happy to be able to make so many Christmas gifts this year!