Anyway, this Christmas, like previous, I made Christmas dish towels for all the family which now includes siblings and their kids, plus a growing list of friends who have ended up on 'the list.' It meant this year I had to weave 27 for presents, so I increased the yardage a little and completed 35. Needless to say I used the section beam to warp direct (as last year). My original plan for the 2018 design was a Fibonacci sequence in green and red across the whole width and white weft with a plain twill weave structure. As my sectional beam has 2 inch sections the original idea had to be re-thought to allow me to use the 48 spools in my rack to fill the 2 inch sections so the compromise was a smaller section of the Fibonacci sequence which lasted 48 threads. I filled every other section, reversed the rack (flipping the order) and then filled in the gaps. Overall this gave a repeat pattern at 96 threads.
Winding the spools went smoothly and winding onto the back beam through the Leclerc Tension Box (with an added counter) was fast. Dressing the rest of the loom took a couple of days but with a simple twill weave it wasn't too hard.
The towels were then packed up with about 6 being mailed to various family spread around the U.S and all the rest hand delivered as we had a family Christmas gathering this year in Knoxville so most could be given out personally.
I already have ideas for the 2019 Christmas towel and rather like the idea of not having to change weft colors (stripes) as much. I have used huck lace in the past and just might use that again in the next design, although one never knows. The good thing will be that the looms will all be set up in the new studio well before I have to start, so it won't involve moving a loom into our spare room to complete the project.