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Natural Light

I’ve known for a long time that natural light will give me better color in my photos than artificial light. Unfortunately I can’t make that happen at my loom.

Today I cut HR & YF’s wraps off the loom and did the machine hemming. I still have a bit of hand work to do before I can do any wet finishing, but wanted to get a photo now, in case it ended up being after dark by the time I took them out of the dryer.

This is the right side of the two wraps. YF’s wrap is on top, with a cotton periwinkle weft in my common hearts weave pattern. HR’s is on the bottom, with an iris tencel weft in my hearts & flowers weave pattern.
HR & YF's wraps, right side

And here’s the left side; the differences are more obvious here.

HR & YF's wraps, left side

I’m going to sit with my needles & do the hand work now.

Colorful

Although most trees have already lost their leaves, a few things in my yard are just now putting on their shows.

Here’s a spirea, flaming color at the top.
spirea in fall

Ignore the power poles and line in this photo (should have taken it from someplace else) and just focus on that Bradford pear tree. Deep red-orange with burgundy and dark green.
fall Bradford pear

I mentioned that I was knitting a baby blanket for my niece. It will be delivered to her tomorrow, so I think I’m safe in posting it now.

LMC knit blanket

She really wanted organic cotton, and in a color that would work for both boys & girls, so I chose this soft yellow in Debbie Bliss ecobaby. It’s organic, fair trade cotton, spun & dyed in Italy. It wasn’t hard to work with and I like the way it turned out. Then and only then did I pay attention to the care instructions: machine wash, barely warm water, gentle cycle, no bleach — ok, not too onerous. Here’s the bad news — do not tumble dry. What?! For a baby item?! It wasn’t easy to get this dry without hanging it and making it all stretch out of shape. I can’t imagine dealing with that restriction on a regular basis. If it was mine, I’d probably end up tossing it in the dryer after the 2nd wash & just accept whatever happened.

Updates

blanket with binding

Here’s the binding after I re-sewed it. I haven’t pressed it yet; it will look even better after that.

Plus….I was able to weave 80″ of YF”s wrap today without a hitch. WHEW!!! Disaster averted!

In order to make sure the Tasmanian devil didn’t strike again, every time the warp needed to be advanced, which is every 2-3″, instead of using the brake release from the front of the loom, I released the tension, got up, went to the back of the loom, and unwound a few inches from there. Tedious and time consuming, but so much better for my brain.

Tried to get a good photo, but the color’s so bad I couldn’t even put it up here.

Problem solved, new problem

I carefully took the puckery binding off that blanket, then lot the problem move around in my brain for a bit.

DOH! I had this problem before, and solved it, and blogged about it! All I had to do was go find that blog post and see how I did it.

Although I did use tissue paper underneath, I think the primary problem solver was pulling that binding really tight as I sewed. I opted for no pinning except at the very beginning ‘cuz I couldn’t figure out how I did that before. I went slow and it looks great. I didn’t take a photo so you’ll just have to trust me.

That’s the good news.

As planned, I started weaving YF’s baby wrap today, using the periwinkle cotton she chose for her weft. The difference between this and HR’s iris tencel is dramatic. (Sure do wish the color wasn’t so wrong, and that I could figure out why it was sometimes right so I could do that again.)

HR's wrap to YF's wrap

Let me back up just a moment…I’ve had to revert to the loom’s braking system instead of the live weight system for this warp. An email conversation with Kati Meek convinced me that I needed to do some tweaking, and it would be easiest for me to wait until this warp is off the loom to do that.

Things were going very smoothly weaving YF’s wrap. I got just over 40″ woven and needed to advance the warp again. As usual, I took the tension off the warp then stepped on the brake release. All of a sudden my back beam spun like the Tasmanian devil.
devil spinning

The weight of the bamboo blinds created a momentum that my brain and foot couldn’t react to quickly enough. It unwound at least 8 feet in about 2 seconds before I could stop it.

CRAP!! Now what?

Just walk away, I thought. But I could only stay away for a minute. I needed to act. But what? How? Where to start?

First I had to get those blinds that unwound off the floor, untangled from loose threads, and out of the way. Not as easy as I’d have liked it to be.

Walk away again, this time for about 5 minutes. I had a plan. Instead of working from the back beam, I’d work from the front. Slowly & carefully I wound the warp onto the cloth beam, using one of the bamboo blinds for packing when I got past the woven cloth. I broke a few threads in the process, but no big deal.

Once I had the warp wound up to the point where it was tensioned again, I slowly & carefully released several inches from the front beam and wound it on the back beam. I did this over and over till I had the warp back to where it was.

Once I’ve fixed the broken warp threads, I hope I don’t have other problems. I’ll admit I’m fearful. I knew I had to let it all sit till tomorrow, don’t try anything more tonight. I’ll keep you posted on how it goes.

P.S. I’m done with the bamboo blind packing for now. This was the icing on the cake. I’d already decided to revert to paper packing for future baby wraps so I can use the live weight system successfully. This was a good experiment/experience, and I learned what I need to, for now at least. In weaving there are ALWAYS more things to learn. That’s one of the reasons I love it!

More towels

I worked really hard today & got the rest of HR’s custom wrap woven. Tomorrow I’ll start on YF’s sister wrap.

Back when I was hemming those baby blankets, I thought I might as well hem the towels. As the days passed I got them washed, dried, and pressed.

I wove 10 towels, 2 of them duplicates. Here are 4 white towels with colored borders.

white towels with borders

And 4 colored towels with contrasting borders.
colored towels with borders

It will be really interesting to me to see which group of towels – these or the gemtone ones – generate more interest and sales at my upcoming shows.