Tuesday, December 25, 2012

One down

Despite the late start today - Christmas Day (a sleep in, then presents, then breakfast) good progress on weaving the Colours of NZ placemats with the first (trial) one now finished.
Number 1 finished
For the next placemats I will be adding some more length before the stripe to allow for a hem and still keep the 16" length.  This one will be a half inch shorter.

With this much finished it is now time to go and stretch out on the couch and watch a movie and get back to the weaving tomorrow.

Monday, December 24, 2012

Christmas Eve weaving

Most of the day has been spent getting ready for the arrival of the Washington part of the family - we are hosting the gathering this year, our last here in Washington as it turns out.  However the cleaning and tidying went pretty quickly so I was able to put in a little bit of time on the weaving.
2/3 of the way through the 1st placemat
It is certainly going well and the slight difference in the yarn, the last placemats were bleached, these ones are half-bleached (the linen is from the Yarn Barn of Kansas) so the 'pattern' shows a little bit better, although that will only really be evident once they are finished and washed, ironed.

Tomorrow, Christmas Day here, will be a quiet day for us.  Great for some more serious weaving :-)





Sunday, December 23, 2012

First stripe

The dyeing went smoothly - 3 main colours and then various shades and mixes to make up about 9 all told (blues, greens, purples, and pink/red).  I painted the wound yarn in fairly random stripes and blocks and wrapped it in glad wrap and left it for 6 hours. 

It washed out fairly easily - very little colour coming from the dyed yarn at all (just the full strength purple  which had quite a bit of red bleeding out.  I dried the yard with a hair dryer and was ready to weave the first stripe to see how the random colours would come out.
The woven stripe

Stripe with pattern visible.
The pattern emerged nicely as I went and getting back into the rhythm won't take long.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Dyeing Linen

After having woven enough of a placemat to check the loom dressing, I'm now moving on to preparing the coloured stripes.  This time I am trying to speed up the process a little, hopefully making it less tedious.  I've measured a weft shot from the test weaving to ensure I have pretty close to the actual length rather than just the width of the warp/drawn in weaving.  On the loom the drawn in width is 12 5/8 inches with the actual weft shot measuring 13 1/8.  I have cut some plastic dividers (the kind used in folders) to exactly half the 13 1/8 measurement and then glued them together to make a fairly rigid (but thin) waterproof frame to wind the linen yarn around.

The idea is to be able to make a whole lot more painted/dyed yarn than the groups of single stripes I made for the last placemats.  It will randomise the pattern a lot more over the whole series of placemats, but that should be fine with the colours and design I have planned.

This morning I mixed up the soda ash mix and the chemical water/thickener.  The former so that I can get the first lot of linen soaking while the latter is setting/thickening before I mix up the colours from the Fiber Reactive dyes I have.
Linen, wound on card, soaking in soda-ash solution
Ready to start mixing colours
The chemical water should be ready by tomorrow morning, so I should be able to paint on the dyes and then let that set for 24 hours - wash the yarn out and dry it ready to start weaving some test stripes by Monday.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

CoNZ Placemat weaving

Another day and I have finished off the threading of the headles (after work on Wednesday) then managed to sley the reed and tie off the warp before calling it a day.  Today after work I was able to weave in some packing weft and weave the first inch or two of weft to check for any treadling/sleying errors.

None spotted, but I'll be checking a bit more, in daylight just to make sure.
2/3 of the heddles threaded, notice the twisting of the warp yarn.
This dressing of the loom went so much more smoothly that the last linen - paying way more attention to making sure nothing tangled and effectively taking it a little slower, worked and it was still a lot faster than with the extra day needed on the last warp when it flew into a huge tangle as I wound it on.
Heddles threaded and reed sleyed
As in the last placemats and using 20/2 linen again the sleying is a nice neat two per dent on the 12 dent reed.
First 1.75 inches woven
The next step is to prepare the dyes and mordant for the coloured stripe - a job for tomorrow/the weekend, with this time it being paua themed colours and I'll be trying a new and improved method for doing more linen at a time.  This placemat will be the testbed.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Colours of NZ Placemats

Finally started today with the placemats for my brother's Christmas present - yes I know it is a little late.  The linen took way longer than planned after multiple non-available messages before finally finding a source only to find out it was coming all the way from India!

These placemats will be similar to the Colours of Ireland, with a different coloured stripe (a paua theme) and a little wider at 13".

So this weekend we were able to warp and chain the necessary linen for the 8 placemats needed (plus a bit spare for trials, and a sample), then begin to dress the loom.  I remembered the difficulties encountered with winding on the warp last time, so was more carefull to defeat the natural tendancy of linen to a) grip when close together, and b) twist, which I suspect is a by-product of the way I put the warp onto my warping frame - that will need some trials to determine the best way to avoid this.  Bottom line - it all went well, the warp went onto the back beam without any real problems and I'm now starting to thread the heddles.
Warping frame with the correct length marked out.

One of three, tied up ready for chaining.

The chained warp ready to go (with calculations visible)
Yes - I still warp on the dining room table - certainly not the most erganomic choice.  I have once,  hung the frame on the wall in the entrance hall and warped horizontally which is certainly easier.  Something I will set up again once we are set up more permanently in TN.

The weight - ready to wind on.
 I chose to wind the warp on a small section at a time - to make sure I wouldn't encounter any of the problems of last time.  It meant untwisting the three chains and then combining them onto the weight (water in a milk containter) - I could then wind on the back beam about 3/4 of a revoltion.  While that may seem slow, it meant I could insert my custom cardboard (ex business cards) warp separators as I paused.
Warp wound on - noting the business cards at each segregation.
 Once wound on, it was fairly straight forward to pull the remaining warp through the cross and begin threading the heddles (according to the pattern top left in the picture).
Threading the heddles - with record keeping notebook handy.
This warp, for these placemats, is the same pattern as the last, with one extra 'repeat' in the middle.  The loom is tied up ready to go (from last time) so that will be one step not needed this time.  It should take a few more nights to finish off the dressing and then into the weaving - hopefully to finish during my Christmas time off.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Scarves finished

Spent some time this afternoon finishing the weaving and then the hemstitching and fulling.  The last scarf only had 10 or so inches to weave so didn't actually take too long and the hemstitching (same method I used for the CF blue striped scarves) was simple.  I've fulled them and they are now flat on the drying rack and should dry overnight. 

I've had interest in two and possibly the third - that would be great if they all sold straight off!

#3, 2 and 1

All three a slightly different (length, fringe length and with #3 the pattern).  I certainly learnt a few things during the process, but in general they were fairly straight forward to weave and the little Leclerc Dorothy loom performed perfectly throughout. 

I really like the way the herringbone throws up distinct lines (in the warp direction) along with the obvious colour changing stripes.

The other good news is that the Yarn Barn contacted me to say the 20/2 linen has finally arrived and was shipped a day ago - it should be here by the weekend so I will be able to move straight on to weaving placemats again, although I'll have to 'paint/dye' some weft yarn for the stripes before that starts.