Monday, September 18, 2006

Shadow Weave Profiles

By Leigh

It has been said that the best way to learn something is to teach it. One of the challenges I had in preparing this warp, is that the shadow weave pattern was not written as a draft or even a profile, but rather a description in paragraph form. It is the undulating 4 shaft shadow weave found on page 80 of Margaret B. Windeknecht's Color-and-Weave II.

The description goes something like this:
Blocks A, B, & C are threaded 4 times for a total of 8 ends per block
Blocks D, A, & B are threaded 3 times for a total of 6 ends per block
Blocks C, D, & A are threaded twice, for a total of 4 ends per block
Blocks B, C, D, & A are threaded once, for a total of 2 ends per block
Blocks B, C, & D are threaded twice, for a total of 4 ends per block
Blocks A, B, & C are threaded 3 times for a total of 6 ends per block
Block D is threaded 4 times for a total of 8 ends
Repeat

I couldn't follow this to thread my heddles, so I opened up WinWeave and tried to create a draft from these directions. I still got confused. Then I wondered if I tried to write it as a profile first, then perhaps it would make more sense to me. So I came up with this:

Undulating shadow weave profile.
For some reason this looked easier to follow than the text description. Each small blue square on the graph paper represents one unit, i.e. one dark and one light thread. The number of squares in each rectangle represent how many times that unit is repeated in that block.

This profile is read right to left, the blocks on the bottom being the A blocks, the next line up being the B blocks, etc. So the first A block on the right is 4 units (1 dark thread and 1 light thread for a total of 8 threads), the next block, B, is 4 units (8 threads), etc.

After that I had to figure out how to translate all that into a heddle threading pattern. This was a bit more challenging as the profiles Ms. Windeknecht uses are different from the profiles I had become familiar with in Marian Powell's 1000+ Patterns.

Ms. Powell uses adjacent shafts for threading the blocks, while Ms. Windeknecht uses opposite shafts as developed by Mary Meigs Atwater. So:
Block A - Atwater, shafts 1 & 3 - Powell, shafts 1 & 2
Block B - Atwater, shafts 2 & 4 - Powell, shafts 3 & 4
Block C - Atwater, shafts 3 & 1 - Powell, shafts 2 & 1
Block D - Atwater, shafts 4 & 2 - Powell, shafts 4 & 3

I wrote out the 2 shafts for each square of the profile using the Atwater system, and came up with this (these are the first 4 blocks with A, which uses shafts 1 and 3 on the right, all the way to D, using shafts 4 and 2 on the left):

Detail using the Atwater threading draft.A standard tie-up is used and it is to be treadled as drawn in. After I finally got it onto WinWeave, the draft and drawdown something like this:

Partial draft and drawdown for the undulating shadow weave.
Of course, this isn't the entire pattern. WinWeave wanted to print in out on 5 pages, which I decided not to do.

If anyone has actually read through this, congratulations! If anyone actually understands it, stand up and take a bow! I would love to ask for feedback as to whether or not it makes any sense, but I think that would be asking a bit much of my readers. So thank you for bearing with me. I think I understand it better for trying to explain it, though I don't know if I could do a repeat performance in a month or two.


Related Posts:
Profile Drafts
Undulating Shadow Weave 1 - Weaving
Undulating Shadow Weave 2 - Hemstitching
Undulating Shadow Weave 3 - Finishing
Shadow Weave Samples 1 - Begins the series of samples

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Leigh, believe it or not I do understand what you are explaining. It's essentially a story about the struggle we have to all understand each other! Different ways of describing patterns. It's funny that a graphical explaination ends up clearer than a written or spoken one, but it does work. I'm enjoying your blog. thanks

Leigh said...

Kaz, thank you, thank you, thank you! You've made my day. Your comparison is actually quite profound. Something good to chew on.

Leigh said...

Another reason to push a "weaving software" higher up on my "to get" list. Actually WinWeave was just an easy way to test the waters with weaving software. I can see that it is useful enough to make an investment in something more versatile.

bspinner said...

HI Leigh:
Your explaination on shadow weave is great. Our guild did a sample exchange on it and it took me forever to figure it out.
You asked what soft ware I use for my drawdowns. I do have Weave It Pro but the darn thing crashes once in awhile and drives me crazy, so now I'm using WeaveDesign. Its a free download from the Pikes Peak Weavers Guild
www:pikespeakweavers.org writen by Benght Nelson.
I have your blog in my favorites. Nice to communicate with a fellow weaver.
Barb

Anonymous said...

Very nice explanation, Leigh. I'm enjoying your blog very much!
Kimmen

Sayward said...

I understand you! (Although I admit, I read your post twice.) The shadow weave creates a beautiful effect. You may have just inspired me to give it a try.

Leigh said...

Thank you! Thank you for being willing to read it to try and understand it, and thank you for your encouraging compliments.