BIG BANG AND BIG THREAD
Time is running away and in the not-too-distant future I will be on the road again for another US spring visit (US spring, my fall).
Last year, at my friend Janet’s suggestion, I signed up for CNCH, the Conference for Northern California Handweavers, and had a great time taking classes with Robin Spady and Syne Mitchell as well as demonstrating backstrap weaving at the education booth along with Annie MacHale and Yonat Michaelov on their inkle looms.
I met so many fun people, online friends from Weavolution and Ravelry as well as made new friends with people like Kathe Todd-Hooker and Pat Spark who shared all they knew with me about the weaving of the Russian Old Believers.
I will be going back to hang out with Annie, Yonat and other southern Californians and then heading up to see the northerners in Janet Finch’s
territory amongst the majestic Redwoods and on further north to spend some time with some weave-along buddies as well as Betty Davenport and Linda Hendrickson.
Then I will zip over to the east side which I also visited last year with a memorable two days at the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival.
Unfortunately, the festival is not in my plans this year but I will be seeing my good friends in Maryland and doing lots of backstrap weaving along the way.
I couldn’t have hoped for a smoother and easier transition and I want to thank Julia and especially Syne for making this happen. This has kept me very busy behind the scenes updating all my links!! Facebook, Flickr, Ravelry, Weavolution, Yahoo, Weaving Today….you name it!!
You may have noticed that I try to sneak in a link or two to the book in every blog post.. Well, all those links need to be changed. Thankfully Syne once again came to my rescue and put together a redirect page and link on WeaveZine with the whole story which will smooth things over until I can go through every blog post and update.
So here I present (click on the following text) Andean Pebble Weave’s new home.
You will find the logo and more links on the sidebar and at various places on my blog.
Well, the extra online time kept me away from the loom a bit this week but I still managed to get four things off the loom and have started a fifth. How did I manage that? By using BIG thread, that weaves up super fast.
So, with the new trip looming I decided to weave up some stuff that I had promised to friends on my last trips to the US, that is, some backstraps. They should weave their own…isn’t that what you are thinking? Well they are mostly into very narrow bands and so I offered to make them backstraps. The Tahki cotton is actually roughly half the weight of the cotton that I normally use for backstraps and so I doubled it.
They will end up looking like these…
The weavers in Tarabuco use a very fine thread for their background color and a heavier one for the pattern. I prefer to use the same weight for both threads.
I was making little tapestry pieces just adding in colors here and there with the ends left hanging out the back. I made it up as I went along as there was no one to ask, no books to consult and no internet. As I got better I yearned to be able to do some kind of ethnic motifs. And then I found a picture of a Mapuche belt in an Argentinean knitting magazine and I adapted and wove the motif in tapestry technique. I so wish I still had those little experiments from all those years ago. They got left behind when I moved up here.
I still have the little scrap which I cut from the magazine, now quite battered. My motif is a much smaller version of this. Imagine how excited I was when I got to learn the technique used to weave it.
The only problem with these complimentary warp weaves is deciding which side you like best when you are done. Weaving alternating blocks as I did on the red bag helps with that problem!
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From big thread to big bang…the Backstrap Group’s Weave-Along came to its end last Sunday. We called the final day the “big bang” wanting to end with a bang rather than a whimper, you see. Here are some products…
Jennifer, after having made several pebble weave and a double weave project during the course of the weave along, chose to use a colorful plain weave band to make a zippered pouch. She got to learn and practice several finishing techniques this way, such as, the single cross knit looping/Van Dyke stitch to cover the place where her two panels joined, braiding for her zip pull and a plain weave tubular band for the edges. Among many other things Popsicletote contributed this fun picture of her loom bar lodged behind her feet.
Bobbie learned and practiced pebble weave, simple warp floats and supplementary weft patterning during the weave-along. She made a bag from one piece of colorful plain and pebble weave and added a braided strap. She also used a tubular plain weave band to edge it.
Barry focused on pebble weave for this weave along after having made himself a backstrap. He is sampling a new-to-him yarn called Patons Smoothie which I believe is acrylic and hopes to make a belt. I like the way he has sewn the end on the diagonal to finish it.
We agreed that the bird motif, which I charted in my book from a band I bought on Taquile Island, Peru, looks like a rocket- powered Warner Bros. roadrunner on roller skates.
Tracy didn’t finish her big bang project but she made a very special contribution with a couple of videos of herself at the loom instead.
Outside the weave-along, Helena in Brazil sent me pictures of her latest work. She took one of the designs from the weft twining that the Montagnard weavers use to finish their pieces and adapted it to the warp float technique that they use. This technique can create some long-ish warp floats on the back. The technique is shown in this lettering tutorial. I am so happy that someone has used the instructions in this tutorial. Helena is the first one that I know of to have done so and she has been very creative with it.
I asked Helena about the thread that she uses. As the thread I use here is from Brazil, of course I wasn’t surprised to find that she uses the same. The brand is Circulo and I use the Clea variety, which is about 35wpi and Anne which is about 24wpi. The heavier thread that I use for backstraps and tutorials in the same brand is called Naturale. I found out recently that this brand is available in the UK as well as in Canada and the US through a site located in Vancouver. I guess I am really lucky as I didn’t have to go around here trying all sorts of thread to conclude that I liked the Circulo thread the best. The Circulo is pretty much all we get here and it just happens to be really good stuff.
This has led to a SAL…Spin-along for warp faced weaving and popsicletote is leading the way already with this contribution today…this gorgeous photo at left.
Some people are spinning cotton and Lisa is joining in spinning yak.
I, on the other hand, do not have a whole lot to say about handspun for my backstrap weaving. I have stuff to show but lack the jargon to explain to people online what I do so I am looking forward to following this spin along and acquiring the relevant vocabulary. I know how my handspun yarn should look and feel if it is to behave well on my backstrap loom and that’s pretty much all I can tell you!
So let me show you some things I have made with my handspun llama fiber…
As we are on a spinning theme, I thought I would show you some of the spindles that I have gathered over the years in my travels here.
Some of you may not have seen it as there was a glitch with the video shortly after posting and I had to try to re upload that and then I took that opportunity to redo the photos as I hated the colors I had used.
It is up and running now and you can see it here.
The tutorial is on “plain weave” bands and we know that plain weave doesn’t necessarily have to be plain. I want to edge more things with striped and more interesting multi colored plain weave bands to provide more examples but have yet to find anything to edge. Maybe I will come up with something next week.