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More Mohair on the Rigid Heddle

At the Roycroft show, I had my rigid heddle loom warped up and I was weaving all weekend, as usual. I have really loved the look and feel of the mohair, so decided to warp the RH for more mohair. I was quite happy that I sold a mohair at the show, since it confirmed that I’m not crazy for working with this fiber.

This time I went for a check pattern in two shades of tan, both with a heavy orange tint.
handwoven mohair scarf, tan checks

I wasn’t sure how these two colors would work together, but I got lots of compliments on it while I was working, and I do really like it. They’re two luscious neutrals that work well together.

This was my fourth time wet finishing the mohair, and I believe it was my most successful. I wasn’t so worried about either the washing machine agitation step or the brushing step. This scarf is definitely the most flexible of the three, and therefore the softest. The first one I did, the blue & silver stripe, is definitely the stiffest. Since all three were woven at 6 ends and 6 picks per inch, it’s clear to me that all the difference is in the wet finishing.

I found it interesting that while I was weaving at the Roycroft show I had a few people ask me if mohair was popular. My reply? I don’t know, but it sure is wonderful!

Rigid Heddle Weaving Sells!

After I finished the last post, I went to bed. Like sometimes happens, although my body was tired, my mind wasn’t completely shut off. As I lay there thinking about my sales, I realized something.

Of the 15 scarves I sold at Roycroft, 4 of them were woven on my rigid heddle loom. Which I only use at shows to demonstrate.

That made me really happy.

So what were those four scarves? With the one I made most recently first and moving backwards in time, the cotton and linen Brooks Bouquet I wove at Kenan earlier this month…
handwoven cotton & linen scarf

…the drop-dead gorgeous purple & silver mohair I wove at a local show in May…
purple & silver handwoven mohair scarf

…the alpaca I wove at a show in Canandaigua in November…
handwoven alpaca scarves

…and some bamboo I wove at a show sometime last summer.
handwoven bamboo scarves, log cabin

It’s not like I needed either any proof that rigid heddle weaving is real weaving, or that it’s a great draw and teaching opportunity to demonstrate at shows, but having 26% of my sales be pieces made on this small, light, extremely portable loom is just one more reason to keep doing it.

Your turn: have you had any pleasant surprises lately?

Roycroft Festival Sales

The Roycroft Summer Art Festival is over. The weather was conducive to selling scarves – not too hot & muggy. In fact, it was a bit chilly, making people want to look at warm things.

So what of my new weaving sold?

handwoven lace scarf, eggshell

First to go were the two eggshell huck lace scarves. With a show that started at 10:00AM, I’d sold my first scarf by 11, one of these beauties.  I displayed one of them in the front of the booth, on these really cool stands I have, thanks to my wonderful sister and her talented hubby. I sold the second within the next hour. I’m sure if I’d had two more, I could have sold them before the weekend was over, too; people loved them.

handwoven cotton flannel shawlsNext of my new weaving to be sold wasn’t until Sunday morning, when I sold one of the cotton flannel shawls. It had drawn lots of admiring looks, but no takers. Then, a woman walked up to the booth, saw it, put it on, and bought it within a few minutes.

handwoven cotton & linen scarfLater on Sunday I sold the cotton and linen Brooks Bouquet scarf I’d woven for a demo at the Kenan show. She really liked the mix of colors that still produced a scarf of neutrals.

Surely I didn’t sell just four pieces all weekend?! Nope. I matched the pieces sold at Kenan. What else was snatched up?

handwoven cashmere & silk scarves, creamsicle
A variegated cotton flannel baby blanket. An alpaca houndstooth scarf. Several bamboo scarves woven in different colors and designs. Three cashmere & silk scarves, including a recent one in mango & cream. The drop-dead gorgeous purple & silver mohair scarf. A few rayon scarves.

It was a mix of fibers, sizes, weave patterns.

I’ve got some more rayon on the loom now, and can’t wait to get it woven so I can start working with my newly-acquired silk yarn.

I have 7 weeks before my next show, but then in the next 4 weeks I have 2 more shows, so I plan to build up my stock by weaving my way through July.

Your turn: what are your creative outlets this summer?

Rayon Gemtones

I have time to weave one last project before the Roycroft show. Although I was happy enough with both the Surreal rayon scarves and the Visionary Egyptian cotton scarves, neither gave me the gemtones visual that I wanted. So I decided that’s what I’d do. Time crunch being what it was, I set up the loom for only 2 scarves – I didn’t think I’d have time to weave 3 – sticking with that all-over huck pattern from the eggshell cotton scarves.

handwoven rayon scarves, gemtones lace
Ta da! I do really like them.

The outer stripes are a brilliant turquoise-y color, then a deep purple, with a navy in the middle. I had considered a medium green in the middle, giving the sapphire->amethyst->peridot colors of actual gems, but decided that without sampling (my nemesis), I might be unpleasantly surprised by what that green would do. So it’s sapphire->amethyst->lapis lazuli. I used that same turquoise/sapphire for the weft on both scarves.

For folks who aren’t familiar with huck or other lace weaves, I thought you’d like to see the difference between the two sides of these scarves.
gemtone huck lace scarves, front & back
On the right in the photo you’ll see that the sapphire is prominent, with some longer strands (called floats in the weaving world) holding together bundles of the other colors of threads. Those floats are horizontal, running the width of the scarf. On the left you’ll see that the other colors are more prominent, with the purple and navy having those floats. These floats are vertical, running the length of the scarf. I won’t call these the front and back of the scarf; it’s not like one side is better than the other, they’re just a bit different.

Now it’s time for another confession. I haven’t always pressed my scarves as part of the wet finishing process. I wasn’t sure if it was really worth it. I know better now.

Look at the difference between these two scarves.
scarves ironed and not
The first thing you’ll probably notice is that the scarf on the left, the one I’ve pressed, is a full 1/2″ wider than the one on the right. In something this size, 1/2″ is a lot – it’s almost 10%!

Given the quality of the photo, you may not be able to see much more than that, so I’ll just tell you what the other differences are. The laciness, the airiness, the amount of open space on the pressed scarf is noticeably different than on the non-pressed scarf. This is pretty significant when you’re making handwoven lace! Finally, the floats, those places where the threads are longer than their neighbors, are settled into their homes much better. They lay flatter and do their job of gathering their friends together more neatly.

From now on, I’ll be pressing scarves. Live and learn – mostly from other weavers!

So now I’ve caught up on what I’ve woven since June 6, between the Kenan show and the Roycroft show. I sold 17 pieces at Kenan, and since then wove 17 and beaded one (2 unsaleable). I have been busy. By the time you read this, the Roycroft show will be in full swing. I’ll see what shoppers have to say there, and will begin my July weaving pretty quickly after that. I wonder how it’ll change my focus – my colors, my fabrics, my patterns….

Eggshell Cotton Huck Lace

My eggshell cashmere silk scarves were a failure, at least as far as being saleable. So I combined my customers’ requests for white or eggshell scarves and their desire for cottons into one product.

After my recent experience with the 5/2 handpainted Egyptian cotton, I knew that I wanted to sett the eggshell cotton farther apart than the 15 ends per inch I used then. I also wanted to make them be handwoven lace, because that would help with softness and drape. Lace weaves need to be sett and beat loosely, so I took a gulp and set the neutral 5/2 pearl cotton at 12 ends per inch. I threaded the loom for an all over huck, and sat down to weave.
handwoven lace scarf, eggshell

I LOVE THESE SCARVES!

They’re soft drape really well for cotton. The color and lace provide a very classic look; the cotton ensures great versatility. I’ll be amazed if they don’t sell at the Roycroft summer show this weekend. I’m sure I’ll be making more of these. (Hope I don’t end up eating those words.)

Like with most of my handwoven lace, I made these scarves on my delightful little counterbalance loom. It is totally possible to weave with 3 shafts against 1 on a counterbalance. It just takes a bit more care, since the shed (the opening where you pass the shuttle through) isn’t as large.

No, once again I didn’t sample these scarves. I am much more confident when I’m working on my little loom. We operate on the same mental plane, and I just knew this one would work.