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Busy day

I worked really hard today. I spent about 2 hours shoveling snow. Came inside and made some phone calls, vacuumed, and decided I needed to do something sedentary for a while. So I fringed & washed the third red gradient shawl. Tomorrow I’ll press all three, and that’s when I’ll see if there are any inconsistencies that would knock one or more out of the running for a hands-on jury.

Took the dog for a short walk (too cold for a long one), and still needed more chair time, so I set about beading the fringe on my taquete shawl for jurying.

beaded fringe on taquete shawl

You wouldn’t think it would take too long to do this to all four edges, would you? You’d be wrong. I ended up working for almost 2 hours on this from choosing the beads to putting everything away. A dozen Swarovski crystals, each with an aurora borealis finish giving them a colorful glow, and a few seed beads really dressed up the shawl, I think.

I ate some dinner and took a nice, hot bath. Then I beamed the warp for AM & HF.

AM & HF's warp beamed

Those simple, bright colors are so cheerful, they make me smile even when I’m this tired.

Now it’s time to simply veg a bit in front of the tube. Tomorrow’s another day.

Shawls & Wraps

After the marigold-dyed silk I thought I would use periwinkle rayon for the 3rd shawl with the red gradient warp. Before I committed to that I figured I should try some more colors, so I treadled 1-8 with 4 different colors: from the bottom up it’s periwinkle, seafoam, medium blue, and silver. The first 3 are rayon, the last is silk.

testing 4 more weft colors

I decided the silver silk was the way to go. I got it woven, cut all three off the loom, and fringed the silver and gold last night. Today I washed them & got them dried. I had hoped to fringe the one with the navy weft this evening, but it’s already 9:40 and I haven’t begun, so it won’t be done tonight. I’ll show you all 3 when they’re all fringed, washed, dried, and pressed. Anyway, here’s what that silver one looked like from under the loom. Pretty great, huh?

red gradients with silver weft

As the snow started falling today I did manage to wind the warp for AM & HF’s baby wraps. I forgot to take a picture of the third bout, but here are the bright and cheerful crayola colors of their other 3 bouts: bleu moyen, mauve pale, and fushia.

bleu moyen warp

bleu moyen & mauve pale warp

fushia warp

Before I can get it on the loom tomorrow I have to do my thorough vacuuming — essential after every single warp. Sigh.

Plus I’ll have to decide if we had too much snow for me to shovel or if I can handle it. The latter is my preference; I strongly believe the more you do, the more you can do, the less you do, the less you can do. So I work my body appropriately. I’ve already shoveled my driveway 3 times this season, plus a really quick one this evening when there was only about an inch of snow so far. That may not seem like much to some, but my driveway is about 400′ long and has a large ‘landing area’ at the top. Good cardio and muscle work. Oddly, I’d rather shovel than vacuum. I just hate housework. Deep sigh.

If at first you don’t succeed…

This rayon shawl has given me lots of experience in trying again. I’m aiming for it to be my last jury piece for the year, so it’s really important to me that I get it right. (That waves piece isn’t going to show well, even in a frame.) I planned for a warp of 4 colors – spice, cerise, cayenne, and deep coral – with gradients from one color to the next. I’d spent hours on my computer playing with various threadings and treadlings and came up with a design I liked. I was going to do an advancing twill, so needed to sett the my 8/2 rayon warp at 28 ends per inch.

As I was planning how many yards of each color I’d need, I realized that I only thought I had another full tube of cayenne. In reality I had one partial tube – no more than half. So I needed to add a 5th color, and selected rose. On Tuesday I got the warp measured & beamed. On Wednesday I threaded the heddles and reed. I tied to the front apron and treadled 1-8 with a few different colors of yarn to spread the warp, find any threading errors, and test out different colors. I had planned to use a black weft, but my black rayon has a greenish cast to it, so that wouldn’t work. In fact, I’d woven a red houndstooth scarf with it many months ago and people think it’s red and green whether in natural or artificial light.

red grads with 4 wefts

The navy looked good so I hemmed and started weaving. It’s a 64 pick pattern repeat, and I wove 3 full patterns – 192 rows – and then stood up and looked at the pattern. I hated it. So busy that you couldn’t even really see the pattern. By then it was about 9PM so I walked away from the loom, waiting to see what I thought in the morning.

On Thursday morning I still hated it. I spent a bunch more time on my computer to see if I could come up with another treading that I’d like. The answer was no. So I had no choice but to take everything out and re-thread. If I’d wound enough extra I could have just cut it off and saved myself a lot of time, but I’d wound just enough length for 3 shawls, and that’s what I wanted to weave. I need more shawls for my stock, plus it’s impossible to know on the loom if something will be perfect enough for a hands-on jury…if I had 3 chances, the probability of having one for the jury were tripled.

I spent Thursday morning grumpily cutting and removing warp threads, untying, and completely re-threading the loom. After, of course, I’d done more computer planning to come up with an entirely different design. I hemmed again and stared weaving. I got 3 pattern repeats woven again (this time a mere 84 rows total) before I saw it — a float that was way too long and not in my draft. $%#@! I’d tied up one of my treadles wrong!!! Cut out those threads all the way back to the beginning. At least I didn’t need to re-hem.

Tied up the treadle correctly and set off weaving. Slowly so I could concentrate on the treadling.

red gradients with navy weft

I got the first one woven and decided to use a silk weft for the second. I’d dyed this in 2012 using marigolds at my Guild’s annual ‘dye day’ and was waiting to find a project for it. I decided this was it.

red gradient with gold silk weft

I got this shawl woven today, too. I still have the third one to weave. I’m going to use periwinkle rayon — I think. In the am I may decide a different color will work better. In any case I will definitely get it done tomorrow so I can finally start on the next batch of baby wraps!

Waves off loom

Today I wove that last foot or so of the waves and cut the piece off the loom. I decided I couldn’t decide if this was good enough for a jury until I get it framed. There’s enough length for 3 sections. The first section I wove is just not very dramatic.

section 1 of wavy weaving

The middle section is the best part for sure.

2nd section of wavy weaving

The last section, where I tried to be more irregular in the weaving, looks pretty awful without the tension of the loom.

3rd section wavy weaving

Given how this looks I decided I had to weave the other piece that I thought might be jury-worthy before I do that next baby wrap warp. Otherwise I’ll be too mentally distracted when I do the baby wraps, and that’s what leads to mistakes. Besides, the shawl warp won’t take that much time…fewer total threads and less length. I gotta do what I gotta do.

Transitions

I have one more hands-on jury piece to weave. I had 4 ideas: one I needed to order a cone of rayon to implement, two I thought would require a few tries to get it right, and one that I thought I could implement relatively quickly. So I ordered that cone of yarn and while I was waiting went ahead with the 4th idea.

I measured out a 3-color gradient rayon warp & set up the little counterbalance loom. I cut a stiff but not too thick piece of cardboard into a few free-form curves. I sat down at the loom, hemmed the edge as always when I’m going to fringe the piece, and started weaving. Awful! Not at all what I had in my mind. Ignoring color for the moment, I tried with a few different weights of yarn to see if that would provide the results. Nope.

trying to weave waves

Walk away. Think. What else could I do with this warp that might be good enough? How about beaded leno? Give it a shot.

beaded leno

This involves threading tiny beads on my warp thread, winding it by hand onto a shuttle, and slowly, painstakingly, push the beads back when I don’t want them and carefully place them when I do. These are my sample beads. They helped me decide that I needed to use the larger size bead. (Can you even see the tiny beads in the 2 top rows? They are exactly the right color, but not the right size.)

So I left space for a fringe and hemmed again. I didn’t have enough of the color beads I wanted, so went with a silver-lined clear bead. I wove about 15″ – 8 rows of leno, 4 of them with the beads, 4 without. After all that tedious, time-consuming work, I decided this would not do. It was pretty impossible for me to keep my selvedges nice and straight, so a jury would be decidedly unimpressed.

Crap! Walk away from the loom for the night. The cone of yarn will arrive on Monday. Will I wait for that? The mail won’t get here till late afternoon, so I’d have to ‘waste’ two whole days. The yarn for my next baby wraps isn’t here yet either, and that’ll probably arrive the same day. I’ll feel really pressured to do the jury piece AND to do the baby wraps. I hate being in that position!

Still I spent a few hours in front of my weaving software playing with drafts to get what I thought would be a winning weave pattern. By then it was 11:30. Stop the madness and go to bed! I read for a bit to turn off the brain whirring and got to sleep.

I got up this morning, went for my walk, did my yoga, took a shower, made my Sunday morning phone call to my friend, and suddenly got a flash.

I bet I know why that wave didn’t work the first time! Two reasons: I was treadling in twill when I should treadle tabby, and I made my curves too deep & too varied. Cut new ones in very gentle lines, went back to the loom and tried out the revised concept.

2nd wave trial

Yeah – that’ll work!

So I left space for a fringe and did hem #3. I started weaving and was happy with what I was producing.

good waves #1

How do I do this? S…L…O…W…L…Y. Here’s a shot of one of my cardboard ‘reeds’ in place.

cardboard reed in place

The routine is throw the shuttle, leave the shed open, insert one of the handmade reeds, close the shed, beat it in. Every single time. As I go I have to decide when & where to shift the reed or switch to a different reed.

Here’s another shot of several inches.

good waves #2

As I was weaving it became clear that I wasn’t willing to risk the kind of thread shifting that might happen during a wet finishing process, even a gentle one. Or what would happen as a scarf like this was worn. Plus the selvedges were a little wavy because the weft wasn’t a consistent tension near the edges.

So I changed my plans only slightly. Instead of making this a wearable, I’ll frame a section of it. I might be able to use a panoramic frame, or I might have to have it custom framed. I’ll choose the section of weaving that I think looks best.

That assumes, of course, that it will still make me happy when it comes off the loom. I’ve woven about 50″ so far. I’m going to keep going for at least another foot, then I’ll cut it off & see where I’m at. Keep your fingers crossed.