Monday, November 23, 2015

Trifecta!

Today I am weaving on all three looms in the loom room for the first time

L-R: BigMac, Dot, and Bernie.
Yesterday I finished dressing BigMac with the second 2015 Christmas towel warp.  Much easier with the angel wings and support from Anne.  I've revised the tie-up considerably as the original worked fine but was not the most efficient.  I spent a couple of hours on the computer to reduce it to what it should have been in the first place - a five shaft huck lace design.  It has allowed a better treddle layout with the tabby treddles (most used) space to the left and then the three pattern treddles in sequence for the right foot.  It should cut my weaving time down a little bit.

The first pattern repeat (confirming the computer work).
Dot has been ready to weave for a little while, but I needed to add some floating selvedges and then weave enough to see if the syncopated threading: Rosepath design would work.  Even given that I am weaving at quite a wide set and will need to wet finish it to draw it in to the final dimensions, the diamond color patterns are starting to appear (if you squint!).  The coaster guild challenge is due in January so I should make that deadline.

Red and purple diamonds appearing with the green weft.
Bernie has been a little neglected after starting the first stripe design I put weaving there on hold to work on the other two projects. 

Progress so far (this is the 'back')


The real priority now is to finish the Christmas towels in time to wrap and send out the Christmas presents.  We are finishing the designs for our 2015 Christmas card to accompany the towels.  That should be completed tonight ready to start printing.

I still have loom #4, the original counter balance loom (unnamed as yet), and of course the loom I am restoring.  I'm still awaiting the final go-ahead to continue the restoration, but there was never a rush on that.  I will have to test weave something with it so will try for 4 looms in action when that occurs.  There's definitely no room for an attempt at '5' at this stage.

We are also still working on llama spinning - although mostly just removing guard hairs from the current pile of wool. 

Sunday, November 15, 2015

First batch of towels finished

Yesterday I finished the final 3 towels by hand stitching the hems.  They joined the rest in a nice satisfying 'pile' of towels.

Finished towels
Next step is to wrap up those towels that are Christmas presents for the NZ family, then get going on the second batch.

I've wound out the skeins for the red and green stripes and washed them.  Currently I am dyeing some smaller lots in red, green, and purple for a guild mug rug challenge.  As soon as they are done I'll do the larger amounts for this project. 

While winding skeins I did a third amount which will by dyed in the indigo pot so that after Christmas towels I will do some slightly modified towels with blue stripes.  They will be for sale.


Sunday, November 8, 2015

Rug #1 "Kowhaiwhai"

I started weaving the first of the three rugs yesterday.  The wool was waiting for us on the front porch when we arrived home from our trip from North Carolina on Sunday.  Two day delivery from Yarn Barn of Kansas and the 10% discount negated delivery charges anyway.

Dressing 'Bernie' was pretty straight forward. I used some linen I had over from weaving place mats a couple of years back.  It makes a good strong warp that hopefully won't break on me.  It did have a fair old bit of twist in it, which once wound on through the cross/lease sticks needed constant untwisting as I dressed back to front - although in this case that is technically top to bottom.

Linen warp going on to Bernie
After spacing the yarn out I added a row of red and white twining before starting the first stripe which is a neutral silver.  I then tied on the cartoon design for the kowhaiwhai stripe and started with the black/red/white.

Pattern stripe appearing.
It will be slower than the plain stripes, but seems a little easier than the zig-zag pattern on Turquoise Lightning (where I used shuttles).  For this, as I have many color changes, I have butterflies of the appropriate yarn hanging ready for the next shot.  It will get a little more complicated, but as long as I maintain consistent 'rules' for the change of color cross-overs it should work out.  Time will tell.


Friday, October 30, 2015

2015 Christmas Towels half way

Progress on the Christmas towels has been great.  I decided to weave these in two batches to make the warp easier to wind.  Turned out well and today I cut the first 10 off BigMac.

The red and green I dyed this year was slightly different to last year.  Forest Green vice Kelly Green seems a lot more 'Christmasy'.  The design this year has solid stripes rather than the red/green mix I did last year which wove a lot faster.

Enough dyed yarn for warp and weft stripes.
The warp winding for 10 towels took a while and is close to the maximum for my warping board (about another 3 yards would see it full).  Anything more will need a warping mill or use the sectional beam on the loom as designed.  I do have a Leclerc Tension box that will work on BigMac but would need to build a bobbin rack.  Perhaps before next year.

Warp wound and tied off.
Dressing the loom also went smoothly.  I had assembled (but not glued and sanded) my new angel wings for BigMac and with Anne helping by supplying the necessary tension and de-snagging the wind on was simple. I may use slightly thinner dowel next time, this was all that I could get at the time.  It works fine, but thinner dowels would mean being able to see the 'next' warp thread from my normal position sitting directly in front of the heddles.  Threading the heddles went without error and only one snag on the reed where I forgot to skip a dent.  I un-did it back to the error and re-sleyed it!

Angel wings in operation.
Weaving turned out to be fairly fast.  45 - 50 minutes per towel.  The first day I did 1, then the next two days 2, then yesterday 5 to get them finished.  The repeating pattern for the huck lace design was simple to remember luckily, and I don't recall having to 'un-weave' even once.  I didn't have a temple large enough for these towels - I'll have to get one some time - but the thick cotton under tension seemed to hold the selvedge fairly well once it had drawn in a bit.

First few pattern repeats.
This morning I cut off the cloth and zig-zag stitched the ends then trimmed the odd end before throwing the whole lot in the wash.

Stack of 10 towels ready for end stitching.
The wet finishing has improved the feel immensely and closed up the structure nicely.  The pattern has pulled in the edges a little but nothing to really notice and I'm sure that will settle a bit more - it did a little after a quick press.  I now have to cut each one then fold and hem the ends - machine stitched for speed.

Then on to batch number 2.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Loom Room

Not quite a weaving studio yet, but over the last couple of days I have managed to make my loom room (spare bedroom #3 - but really fairly small for that purpose) a little more functional. 

Up until now I had so many bags of wool/locks/bats/etc along with boxes of miscellaneous weaving/spinning and odd stuff, that I could only generally use one loom at a time. By stacking the 'stuff' in behind 'Bernie' - the upright loom, I could use 'BagMac' - the Macomber.  Then swap everything around to do the opposite.  Little 'Dot' - the Leclerc Dorothy was mostly hidden under piles of paperwork on the bench so to weave with it I just took it out of the room.

No more!!

I have packed up all the spare wool/yarn etc and moved it up into the attic - where I can still get to it, but it isn't now in my way!  This has meant I actually have two looms dressed - BigMac and Bernie and the plans are underway to dress Dot as well (I have to dye some yarn first).  I even have a little bit of room on the table to work on planning - although it is crowed by some large cones of yarn that will have to move...

Looking almost like a studio (albeit fairly cramped!)
BigMac has a warp for 9 (of the 18) Christmas towels, and Bernie has warp for 3 rugs for an exhibit next year.  More info on both those projects to come.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Llama order

We finished the brown/black portion of the llama fleece a little while back  The final part was to give it a final wash to remove any remaining dust/dirt and set the yarn.  It turned out to be a little over a pound of yarn in 8 skeins.

Llama yarn after final wash
I'm awaiting word back from the owner before dropping off these skeins.  We still have the other 'half' - the white/cream part of the fleece which is a slightly larger amount, so I'm expecting 10 skeins.  Anne does a lot of the picking where we thoroughly remove all visible VM and guard hairs. We are left with a big box of fluffy wool which goes through the drum carder in 1 oz lots.  I have found that once through is enough with this wool then I use a diz and remove it directly from the large drum as roving.  I then pre-draft that roving to give me a perfect spinning diameter roving.

Llama roving ready to spin.
The 1 oz limit is a comfortable amount for the carder - it can hold 2 oz of fibre but at the 1 oz mark I can spin that roving onto one bobbin, spin another, and the result when plied is a 2 oz skein regardless of the thickness of the singles I spin.  This white batch I am spinning a little thicker. It is quicker and also will give the owner another type of wool to sell as up until now most has been spun at fingering or fine.


Sunday, October 11, 2015

Loom modification

While working away at various pieces of the loom restoration I had noted that the top front bar on the castle showed marks most likely caused by Scotch tape - used to hold instructions/guides to the weaving.  I (on my Macomber) typically put the instruction for the treadling sequence there - but just folded so that it hooks over the wooden bar.  That solution works fine until I turn a fan on if it is too hot - it typically blows my notes away.  Options then include clipping it on, or balancing something heavy across the castle on top of it.  It has always been in the back of my mind to find a solution.

All the wood on the restoration loom is being sanded down and refinished so I wasn't worried about the marks, but decided to use that loom to try an idea.

Castle bar with Scotch tape marks
The first thing I did was drill holes from the back (using a stop) through to within 1/8" of the front surface.

3 holes drilled from back of bar.
The I glued a super strong neodymium magnet into each hole.  I had the magnets for other project work

Magnets in place
It's then a simple case of using decorative magnets (or simply more neodymium magnets) to afix notes/guidance/instruction to the front of the bar.

Finished modification
In the picture above only the cross bar has been sanded and finished - the difference between it and the rest of the castle can be seen and is much more obvious in brighter light.  This works really well so I will be modifying both the Macomber and the Leclerc next.