Saturday, April 20, 2024

Pumpkin Spice Overshot Throw



Detail - Star of Bethlehem weaving pattern in the Pumpkin Spice Overshot Throw.

It looks like October, doesn't it?  Warm apple cider and pumpkin spice.  Crunchy fall leaves under foot.

Saw this on FB Marketplace last week listed as:

Groovy diamond print retro orange fabric.  Looks to be attached at the center with thicker abstract outer edges. Could be used for clothing, sewing, or even as a tablecloth. Feels like a thicker more double knit style. No condition issues. 

It was local, and the price was right at $25 (including shipping).  I felt like I needed to rescue it because I knew someone made it -- Someone took the time to hand weave it line-by-line.  The seller didn't really seem to understand what it was.  Double knit? Nope!

I don't think it's antique -- it seems much newer than that.  I think it's all cotton and wool.  It's made in 2 panels with a seam down the middle.  Borders all around.  Might be a baby blanket or a throw from one of Tom Knisley's books?  

 

 

 

I recognized the Star of Bethlehem overshot weaving pattern from Anne Dixon's The Hand Weaver's Pattern Directory [full color] book of weaving drafts.  Or you can get this pattern from Heddlecraft, attributed to Josephine Estes’ publication “Original Miniature Patterns for Hand Weaving”  as seen above.

 

Detail of the fibers and the overshot.  Maybe the orange is wool after all?  It looks hairier than cotton tends to be.   

[I should have turned this photo 90 degrees, as the orange would be woven on the horizontal, but on;ly a weaver would know that!]

 

Here's a detail of the border design.

Here are the photos from the Marketplace listing (for the record and the sake of documentation): 

 

  

 

  

 

 

  


Sunday, April 14, 2024

Slow Going Beaming the Sectional Warp

Winding the sectional warp, one section at a time.

It's been very slow going beaming the sectional warp.  I know there's a learning curve ...  



I found a few videos (Part 1; Part 2) on how to do it with a warping board (I'm using my warping mill instead) one bundle at a time.  I don't have a creel or 24 spools to wind on straight from the spools -- I have considered it, but can't justify the space the extra equipment will take up, or the expense, not being a production weaver.  It takes longer to secure the warp chain than it does to wind a 24-end warp.  It's only 3 trips up-and-down with 4 strings.  

 

This is how I secure the cross at the top.  Red marks the top and green marks the lower.  Same for the cross at the bottom.  This will be important later on when I need to insert the lease sticks at the loom. 

 

These are mostly secured with lark's head knots, because they are secure and easy to remove later. 

 

4 x 1-pound cones of 10/2 American Maid natural cotton for the warp. 

 

Normally I use a counter app on my phone to keep track of how many strings I've run in any given warp.  But my phone kept going to sleep before I ran the 12 yards down and back up to the top of the warping mill.  It took too many taps to wake it up and get back to where I could tap the app to track the strings.  I finally gave up and went with an analogue method [See photo above.].  Tried and true.  This works just fine!

The videos worked well enough for the basics, but there were a few things that didn't work so well for me.  I have a tension box (Thank goodness!).  She combed out the strings -- I found that it was easier to snap them.  I don't have the right comb for the strings I'm working with.

I broke a couple of strings in the first 2 bundles.  The first bundle, the loose and broken strings tangled miserably.   The 2nd one, I decided to put a note on it to add 2 repair strings later to hang off the back -- just like olden days.

After that, I was winding 1 bundle at a time, and then trying to wind it onto the sectional warp.  It took about 1 hour to do a single bundle in the beginning.  At this rate, it's going to take me months just to get the loom set up.  I thought this was supposed to simplify things?  

 


I developed a couple of tricks to help --  The one teacher said she doesn't crochet the warp chains, she just coils them into a bag -- That wasn't really working for me.  I started winding it around a piece of cardboard, then realized that I could use the rag shuttles with this loom, so I've been running the individual 24-end bundles on the warping mill, then pulling them off onto the rag shuttles (from the top down) where they keep nice and stable until I can wind them onto the sectional warp in bundles.

This is the very simple cross holder my DH made out of some of the leftover cherry.  Very helpful!

Here is the tension box, which works great as long as I remember to thread the strings around the pegs.

I will say that the finished bundles look so nice and neat!  So far, I have 22 bundles on the sectional warp.  Only 15more to go! 

This system should solve some problems with tension and the cigar slopping at the ends ...  I am looking forward to that!

Saturday, April 06, 2024

Embrace Your Curves - EAA Quilt Challenge 2024: Clyde the Octopus is Complete


Clyde the Octopus

EAA Quilt Challenge 2024 - Embrace Your Curves

What has more curves than an Octopus?

 

Detail of a tentacle, and the "buttons" that are standing in for suckers. 


 

Here's a detail of the quilting in the borders.  Free-motion swirls, indicative of the sea, waves, or fiddlehead ferns (akin to seaweed).  I should have waited to quilt the borders AFTER doing the binding.  Some of the swirls got lost under the binding.

I also added a flash of color with an orange-y flange with the binding. 

 

 

After cutting out the pieces, I fused them together as 1 unit, and then fused it to a piece of black fabric.   Don't worry-- This is only to stabilize the applique.  The black won't be visible in the final quilt.  

 Next, I added tear-away stabilizer on the back, and started stitching.

I used invisible thread and a zigzag stitch to sew down all the edges to the black background fabric.

 

Then I used a satin stitch and the glossy embroidery threads to finish those edges properly, so that nothing pops up unexpectedly in the future.  Above, you can see some of the thread colors involved. 

I did not satin stitch around the suckers. That would have been utter madness!  Instead, I free motion stitched the edges of all those circles.

 

Here's a detail shot of one of the tentacles, showing how all the edges are stitched and secured with satin stitch or free-motion circles. 

 

Here it is from the back as seen from the tear-away stabilizer side.  As you might guess, the stabilizer is torn away before layering it with batting and backing. 

The next step is to cut out the applique.  The black fabric is not a background, but more of another stabilizer for the applique, allowing it to coalesce into a single unit that can then be appliqued to the green seaweed-y hand-dyed fabric -- I used Dream Wool batting as the stabilizer at this stage.   I cut the black fabric about 1/4 inch from the edges of the octopus, and then appliqued that to the dark green background using the invisible thread (again) and a nondescript zigzag stitch.

Once it was appliqued and stuck fast, I added the backing and outlined the Octopus by stitching about 1/4-inch away from it.  This helps it pop out for a 3D Trapunto-like effect.

 

Here it is from the back.  And again -- In real life, it is square.


 These are most of the thread colors used in this piece.  I wanted to have a record of this before I put them away.