Sherwood Forest Hand-Dyed Warp by Blazing Shuttles in 3/2 Cotton
I have been missing the physical motion and the clack-clack sounds of weaving. It will be good to be back at it again. Soon ...
I admit to weaving paralysis when it comes to this gorgeous hand-dyed warp by Blazing Shuttles because I didn't want to ruin it. I've had this warp since 2022! To me, these are the colors of Scotland in early spring. Before things turn that luscious green, they are red ...
- 2 3/2-cotton warps in Sherwood Forest
- 100 ends each = 200 ends total
- 4.5 yards
This weight of yarn is said to be suitable for towels or heavier outdoor fabrics. So perhaps, I will get some towels out of it, or a scarf, but also have some left to patch into a jean jacket, or some other wearable.
I plan to use this twill draft for 8 shafts as shown here.
I can tie on to the ends of the last warp, as it is already threaded in a point twill. That should save me oodles of time threading heddles.
- 16 ends-per-inch for a twill
- 15-dent Reed with 1 thread per dent
- or 8-dent reed with 2 threads per dent [This is the one I went with ...]
- or the 10-dent reed with 1-2-1-2-1-2 threading
- 12.5 inches wide in the reed
I combined / split the warps like so:
Warp 1 50 ends | Warp 2 100 ends | Warp 1 50 ends
There are multiple steps to getting set up this time around, though fewer than if I had to thread heddles, and run a warp myself.
Step 4: Tie the new warp onto the old strings. Gently pop the knots through the reed and heddles, then wind on as normal. [I learned the hard way NOT to wind on before the knots have passed through the tight spots. Too many strings break that way!]
Step 5. Tie onto the front beam.
Step 6: Set the treadles to the shafts.
Step 7: Set up Treadle Beads.
Step 8: Do a test weave to check threading, treadles, etc.





No comments:
Post a Comment