Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Coordinating Runner on the Dornik Herringbone Threading

Last summer I wove a throw rug for my newly set-up weaving room. As I wove, I entertained myself with a number of "what ifs" with the same threading. Could I use one of those ideas to weave a coordinating runner rug for that room? For example, something I noticed was when I wove the plain weave header, was that periodically I had two warp threads sharing the same over-under path.


This is because of the threading. Where the pattern reverses, the two adjacent warp threads are either both on even shafts (8 and 4) or on odd shafts (1 and 5).


This is usually considered a no-no for twills, but it works with the reverses in the herringbone pattern. What if I threaded these two warp threads in the same color (green) and everything else in the variegated yarn. I should get a rug runner with green stripes!

For the weft, I plan to use the same variegated yarn, which will give the effect of a pseudo plaid. Will it work? I'm fixing to find out.


Historical Research: American Weaving

One of the projects I have set for myself is to weave my family tree. i.e., samples of the traditional textiles from the cultures of my ancestors. I already have ideas for some of them (list here), but I'm starting with the most recent group, which is American. Trying to figure out distinctly American contributions to the history of weaving has been a bit of a challenge, because search information tends to be trendy rather than historically encompassing.

The time frame for my American heritage is broad, early 1600s to modern day. With that in mind, I've managed to piece together a somewhat approximate timeline of the relevant highlights.

Timeline of American weaving
  • mid-1600s to 1725 - overshot coverlets and plain weave for garments
  • 1725 to 1825 - coverlets in double weave and summer-and-winter
    • white cotton and dark blue wool
  • 1785 - power loom patented
  • 1800s to early-1900s - shift to primarily industrialized weaving 
  • 1916 - Mary Meigs Atwater founded the Shuttle-Craft Guild to preserve and promote American handweaving.
  • 1950 - Marguerite Porter Davison published A Handweaver's Pattern Book, based on the drafts preserved by Weaver Rose and the women of southern Appalachia.

I feel like this information gives me something of a historical dividing line between early and modern American weaving, with the end of early American weaving being due to the industrial revolution and the invention of the power loom. Large textile mills were built and weaving became a commercial enterprise. The result was that, apparently, hand weaving became almost extinct, except for a few dedicated handweavers. The resurgence of American weaving as an honored art and craft is largely due to the efforts of Mary Meigs Atwater.

So, maybe I'm looking at two samples?

Early American Weaving Characteristics
  • Early American weaving had it's roots in Europe, and according to Mary Meigs Atwater's The Shuttle-Craft Book of American Hand-Weaving included Dutch, Mennonite, Scotch, Irish, and English traditions.
  • Uses:
    • fabric for clothing
    • coverlets
  • Yarns:
    • wool weft
    • cotton warp and tabby
    • linen warp and tabby
    • An interesting note from Handwoven Magazine: Pre-Revolution cotton production was forbidden in the British colonies. This was meant to create a monopoly on British-made cotton yarns, but the result was that American weavers began to replace cotton with linen (aka tow, from flax plants).
  • Fabrics
    • linsey-woolsey - linen (tow) warp and wool weft typically woven in plain weave or twill for garments.
  • Colors:
    • natural fiber colors
    • natural dyes. Especially popular were
      • indigo blue
      • madder red
  • Structures 
    • 4-shaft overshot for coverlets
    • plain weave 
    • twill
    • barley corn weave (later called spot Bronson)
    • M's and O's
    • huck
    • summer and winter

Modern American Weaving Characteristics

Trying to identify specific characteristic of modern American weaving is more challenging. At some point, the focus shifted from utilitarian to artistic expression. Not that people stopped weaving useful items, but modern American weaving began to focus on weaving as an art form. In watching episodes of Textiles & Tea (hosted by the Handweavers Guild of America) I see an amazing amount of innovation and creativity. I have no idea if it's possible to weave a sample that represents all that.

Anyway, my plan is to do a first sample in an early American overshot pattern. I actually have an example of such a coverlet, woven by my 4x-great grandmother. (Pictures at that link.)

I'll decide about a modern sample later.

Monday, February 03, 2025

Weaving My Family Tree: Decisions Made

Our recent cold spell interrupted my weaving plans. It was so cold we closed off my sewing room to conserve heat in the rest of the house. So I couldn't get to my table loom. I finally got my bookmarks done, but I lost weaving momentum and mentally set the crackle pine tree table runner aside for now. I'd like to rethink it anyway. The bookmarks were interesting, but for the tree motif, I think I like 8-shaft summer-and-winter designs better. 

Even though I couldn't get to my loom, I had plenty of time to start thinking about my genealogy weaving project. And I made some decisions on how to approach it (my list of decisions to be made is in this post.) 
  • I want to use the correct fiber types for the time period, but I don't want to spin my own yarns.
  • Ditto for the colors. I want to approximate them but without dyeing my own yarns.
  • I'm not going to worry about period equipment, I'll use what I've got.
  • Size of samples will be standard notebook size. The plan is to weave 3 of each sample, and make 3 notebooks, one for myself and one for each of my kids.

Another decision to be made is sample order in the notebook. I plan to start with the present and work my way back. But there is some overlap of years. For example, my American ancestors date from 1620 to present, while my Irish ancestor arrived in Canada around 1825. My Prussian ancestor arrived in 1783 to fight for the British in the American Revolution. So, overlapping of dates. 

There's no time table for this project, but I suspect it will take quite awhile. I'm starting with research for American weaving, but I'll put all that in a separate post.

Friday, January 31, 2025

Pine Tree & Snowflake Crackle Bookmarks

I had a yard-long warp and managed to weave three pine tree and snowball snowflake bookmarks. Atwater and Snyder called them snowballs, but I changed the name to snowflake because, as you can see, mine aren't solid like their diagrams. 

Fresh off the loom in the order woven (left to right). The middle bookmark is backside up.

Particulars

  • Pattern: Mary Snyder, The Crackle Weave (1961 edition) page 24, which was based on Mary Meigs Atwater's The Recipe Book Series I, Recipe No. 12.
  • Structure: 4-shaft crackle weave
  • Yarns (all cotton):
    • Warp: 20/2 cotton warp in light blue
    • Tabby weft: same as warp
    • Pattern weft: 
      • for the two on the left I used 6/2 in dark green and white
      • 10/2 for the one on the right I used 10/2 in medium green and natural
  • Warp ends: 100
  • Sett: 44 e.p.i.
  • Sley: 3-4-4 in a 12-dent reed
  • Threading: 
  • Treadling: ad lib

Notes and Observations
  • There wasn't a treadling draft so I experimented.
  • I also experimented with yarn weights and colors.
  • Of the pattern yarns, I like the heavier 6/2 better.
    • It made a firmer fabric, which would be more suitable for a table runner.
    • It made the pattern stand out more
  • I had a couple of warp yarn breakages, some of which I didn't fix because the sett crams the heddles so close together, making it difficult to rethread them. 
This was a good project and I gleaned good information for a possible future table runner in an adaptation of Atwater's coverlet pattern.

Pine Tree & Snowball Bookmarks: Planning

Sunday, January 26, 2025

Nature's Color Palettes: Thoughts & Observations

Continued from Nature's Color Palettes: A Few More

I'm still taking photos to play with for color palettes.

Moss

Moss color palette

By using Gimp photo editor's zoom, I was able to find "hidden" colors, like the orangey browns in the moss. 

Quartz

Quartz color palette

Fungi

Fungi color palette

Interestingly, the fungi color palette is very similar to the natural colors of Shetland sheep fleece.

Handspun Shetland in whites, silvers, grays, fawns, moorits, and blacks.

It also reminded me of one of the samples I wove for my Crackle sampler with natural, medium brown, and dark gray yarns.

Crackle sample #18 - Snyder's Shadow Blocks

Maybe that's why the color combination was so appealing to me.

Then the Shetland samples reminded me of the colors of the natural cotton samples I got at a charkha spinning workshop

Palette of natural cotton colors

Observations:
  • My winter season color palettes are primarily browns, grays, blues, and greens
  • The greens are mostly warm greens.
  • Also, I'm realizing how much my eye blends and assumes what colors I'm seeing. When I use the photo editor color picker, I get the color of one pixel which sometimes surprises me because my brain has interpreted the blend of colors differently. 
  • Because of that, I have to admit that these palettes are only possible because I'm using a computer. 
  • And that has me wondering about color blending in weaving, which is a complex topic.
  • Lots more to ponder and explore.