Friday, December 18, 2009
Weaving a Tale
or a shawl
As projects go, this one isn't taking terribly long (unlike, say, Hey Teach, or the Wallaby of Death), but I am really anxious to get it off the loom! I have projects swimming around in my brain and they Want To Come Out and onto said loom.
Unlike my knitting projects, for which I have dozens of tools (needles), I have only one loom (and that's quite enough, thanks, to anyone who might be reading and hoping for a gift hint) unless you count the potholder loom I acquired for sampling. (Let me tell you how well that's working out. . .)
On the other hand, I wouldn't turn down a stand. . .(okay, it's already ordered--and backordered)
The last two issues of Handwoven have had wonderful looking scarves that just scream for some of the (very small) stash of novelty yarns that I have on hand. And I want to weave a wool rug (okay, a wool mat) and I can't do either (any?) until I free up the loom.
This time, I was determined that I would track how much I have woven. You know, so I'd have an idea of how much I still have to weave.
All on my own (really), I concocted the idea of tying on a string every 6 inches of woven stuff.
What I failed to do was ensure that the little bits of thread I used as my markers stayed on the outside of the rolled woven fabric.
Oops.
So I really don't know for sure how much I still can weave, though that will also be dictated by how much weft I still have on the shuttle.
If the woven length isn't sufficient for wrapping (around shoulders, thrown around the neck), I have a Plan B in mind (button closure on the front edge), but I'd really rather not go there. You know?
As projects go, this one isn't taking terribly long (unlike, say, Hey Teach, or the Wallaby of Death), but I am really anxious to get it off the loom! I have projects swimming around in my brain and they Want To Come Out and onto said loom.
Unlike my knitting projects, for which I have dozens of tools (needles), I have only one loom (and that's quite enough, thanks, to anyone who might be reading and hoping for a gift hint) unless you count the potholder loom I acquired for sampling. (Let me tell you how well that's working out. . .)
On the other hand, I wouldn't turn down a stand. . .(okay, it's already ordered--and backordered)
The last two issues of Handwoven have had wonderful looking scarves that just scream for some of the (very small) stash of novelty yarns that I have on hand. And I want to weave a wool rug (okay, a wool mat) and I can't do either (any?) until I free up the loom.
This time, I was determined that I would track how much I have woven. You know, so I'd have an idea of how much I still have to weave.
All on my own (really), I concocted the idea of tying on a string every 6 inches of woven stuff.
What I failed to do was ensure that the little bits of thread I used as my markers stayed on the outside of the rolled woven fabric.
Oops.
So I really don't know for sure how much I still can weave, though that will also be dictated by how much weft I still have on the shuttle.
If the woven length isn't sufficient for wrapping (around shoulders, thrown around the neck), I have a Plan B in mind (button closure on the front edge), but I'd really rather not go there. You know?
Labels: weaving
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Could you look at the edge, maybe use a flexible measuring tape, and estimate it where there aren't threads sticking out?
Do you have any record of how long the loop was/loops were when you set up the warp?
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Do you have any record of how long the loop was/loops were when you set up the warp?
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