I made more progress on the 8-shaft waffle weave towels, working into the colored part with blue.
So far, this has been a very enjoyable pattern to weave.
This blog records my experiments and successes with fabric and fibers, surface design, stitching, weaving, photography and whatever else strikes my fancy. Enjoy ...
I made more progress on the 8-shaft waffle weave towels, working into the colored part with blue.
So far, this has been a very enjoyable pattern to weave.
Who-hooh! I'm weaving again! Using all 8 shafts on the BIG "Mary Meigs" Kessenich Floor Loom. It took a long time to get things set up, threaded, and wound on, but here we are again! You have no idea how happy this makes me!
This is an 8-shaft waffle weave for towels. It will have a lot of texture one it is wet-finished.
I'll be using the 2 big Jim Hockett shuttles, which seem to work well for this weight of 8/2 cotton yarn, and the expanse they need to travel through the open shed. They have a nice weight. I love the Schacht kayak shuttles, but they are too light-weight for a job this big.
This is a kit from ?? that I bought a few years ago, but never made because my "little" floor loom wasn't wide enough to do them justice. Now I also get to practice using all 8 shafts --
It's a pretty simple pattern, just zipping up and down the treadles: 8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8
Most of them are not too bad -- I was concerned that with the extra shafts added to each treadle, some of them might be too heavy to push down. So far, the only treadle that is a challenge is #7 because it has 7 of 8 treadles attached to it. Sometimes I have to stand up to get that one to work properly. The rest are pretty easy.
Before I could do the fun part of weaving today, I still had to lash onto the cloth beam. That's sorta why I needed the treadles to be set up with plain weave / basket weave -- so I could make sure I threaded everything properly and had a good open and clean shed. This method has you open the shed for plain weave, to make it easier to insert the lashing cord. That worked well enough. So on to the next step ...
Setting up the treadle beads. I used the bed in the guest room as a work table. Each bin has a wooden bead with a number corresponding to the treadle in the pattern. I had it written out ahead of time on the notepad, so that I knew what I'd be programming.
Then I laid them out in order, and started threading the rod that sits on top of my beater bar.
And here are the treadle beads installed atop the beater bar, and ready to be used.
As I said, it's a pretty easy and straightforward treadle pattern -- maybe the easiest I've done in a very long time! The Mountain Cucumber Coverlet had more than 300 treadle beads!
I should go back and oil all the moving parts of the loom to make sure things run smoothly with this project.
This is not even a 6-yard warp, so I don't think it will take long to weave through these 2 towels. ;-)
This is the tie ups as listed in the pattern. All those black squares are to be connected to a treadle.
Then I realized, the treadle tie-ups for this project will be much more complicated than anything I've done before. By my calculations, I will need 43 tie-ups, and I only have 24 chains-S biners and cotter pins on the loom at present. Even if I flip the treadling map in the pattern, I would still need 37 chains, so why not just go for the 43? It means a trip to the local hardware store for some additional supplies.
My Dear Husband volunteered to get under the loom and help get that set up -- That will be for next weekend, which will give me plenty of time to think things through ...
We stopped at the local hardware store for some supplies:
Plumber's Chain -- We needed about 12 ft, and that is exactly what they had left on the roll, at $2.39 per foot. I know, some people use the nylon heddle chord, but I think they must have much lighter looms. Kessenichs are sturdy and solid. Plus, that white heddle chord looks fragile, like it would easily shred. And it's not available at my local hardware store. Someday this might become too heavy for me to treadle, but not yet. Plumber's chain is native to this loom. That's what it came with, and that's what they were using when it was made n the mid 1960s, so that's what I'm going with ...
S-Biners for attaching the chain to the treadles.
Cotter Pins that will be bent and shaped to attach the chains to the lams. Again, there may be other solutions, but this is what was on the loom to start with.
This is the unit I had to build 24 more of.
First, I cut the chains to length and attached the S-Biners.
My husband shaped the cotter pins -- I'm not sure what dark magic he performed in his basement workshop, but when he emerged, they were shaped and fit perfectly.
Here are the NEW completed tie up chains, ready to be installed.
Now to get to work under the loom!
First I used the 24 existing chains, S-Biners, and cotter pins to tie up the treadles from right to left. When I ran out of the supplies, I used the new stuff.
Pro Tips:
I spent the last few weeks setting up the BIG loom for a new project: 8-shaft towels. It's a kit, so a good one to practice getting used to the 8-shaft loom. So farin the last 2 years, I've only used 4 shafts on her, since the bigger size was enough to manage up until now. Weaving always stretches my brain and capabilities!
Last week, I sleyed the reed, and started threading heddles. It's been going faster than I thought it would, and I managed to thread over 700 heddles in just a few days. I would do them in sets of 90-ish and then take a break before my back gave out. This pattern is pretty straight forward threading in a zig-zag pattern of 8 up then 7 back down 1 heddle from each shaft, then repeat. I never look forward to this part of weaving, but I have made peace with it. Patience and attention to detail ...
I invented a new tool to help with threading heddles: I took a scrappy strip of cloth and tied some coins into the ends for weights.
This serves to separate the bulk of the heddles from the set I was currently threading. It worked like 2 charms! On my smaller loom, I used 2 drawer pulls because they fit nicely over the 4 shafts, but they are not wide enough to use with 8 shafts. Hence this new tool. Necessity is the mother of invention!
The 2 new heddle separators in use, and doing a splendid job!
As I was winding on, I realized I couldn't use the treadles with the set-up from the last project to open a common weave shed on all 8 shafts because I only used 4 shafts. I wanted to set up the tension rods for the winding on ...
Then I realized, the treadle tie-ups for this project will be much more complicated than anything I've done before. By my calculations, I will need 43 tie-ups, and I only have 24 chains-S biners and cotter pins on the loom at present. Even if I flip the treadling map in the pattern, I would still need 37 chains, so why not just go for the 43? It means a trip to the local hardware store for some additional supplies.
My Dear Husband volunteered to get under the loom and help get that set up -- That will be for next weekend, which will give me plenty of time to think things through ...
Once the treadles are set up for this project, I will re-wind the warp using the tension rods. The first run through served to comb all the warp strings out and straighten out the tangles. There was so much going on with the first run-through, I forgot to add the paper to separate the warp.
The chaos side. It looked much worse as I was winding on. It always amazes me how things mostly straighten out if you've done things right. I have not tied onto the cloth beam yet, as I'll have to pull it out and re-wind it onto the warp beam next week.