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| First 50 random stripes |
Leigh's Fiber Journal
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Decision About the Random Stripes
Thursday, February 05, 2026
Designing Random Stripes
- Probably the best guarantee of randomness
- I could dress the loom back to front, which I prefer with my Glimakra
- I wouldn't have to figure it out myself
- I don't have a printer to print off the list, so I'd have to go to the library for that
- Or copy it off by hand
- I'd have to remember which color name went with which cone
- Slower (keeping track of which color is next)
- Thread tangling as I wind the warp.
The other option would be designing as I go. To do this, I could wind on multiple threads together and then pick them off the cross in a random manner as I thread the reed.
Advantages:
- faster
Disadvantages:
- I'd have to warp front to back
- Would still likely get tangling
- Possibility I'd not be successful in a truly random pattern
Obviously none of these is seriously monumental. And yes, I'm probably over-thinking it (but then, it's my nature to over-think everything). It probably even seems like I'm procrastinating (which I am to a degree as I finish painting the room my Glimakra is in). But I have to make a decision somehow.
Sunday, February 01, 2026
Random Stripe Dishtowels. Winter: Colors & Yarns
| It's interesting that in the photo the right most cone of yarn is greenish. In real life, it's brownish looking. Ditto with the 2nd to the left, which is bluish here. |
At this point, the thing to do should have been making a digital model with weaving software. Except I don't have weaving software installed on this laptop, so I had a play with it in Gimp. I turned the stripes vertically as the bottom layer, superimposed the leaf weave draft as a top layer, and did a little color replacement of the original draft.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Random Stripe Project Idea: Season Themed Dishtowels
After my successful experiment in random stripes, I started to think about how to apply random stripes. An 8-shaft leaf draft I found floating around the internet gave me an idea.
- The weft forms the shape of the leaf. I can use one representative color for each season. That will make for easier weaving, since I won't have to keep track of and change weft colors.
- The warp colors color the leaf. Here's where I'm thinking about the random stripes. If I choose a variety of yarns in seasonal leaf colors, I can give the leaves some personality, i.e. they won't all be exactly the same. At least not horizontally.
Monday, January 26, 2026
Pattern and Randomness in Nature
I started the year with a goal of permaculture weaving. Exactly what that meant, I wasn't sure, but I knew I wanted to apply permaculture principles to weaving design. I wanted to use nature as the basis for my weaving. I made a list of four things to form a starting point: colors, patterns, shapes, and fibers from nature.
Pattern is one such permaculture principle. I see patterns everywhere in nature: waves, spirals, lobes, branches, nets, scatters, cloud forms, tessellations, Fibonacci sequences, the golden rectangle, etc.
| Trees grow in a predictable branching pattern. It may look different for different types of trees, but the pattern is there. |
When I started making my stripes from nature photographs, I found myself asking questions. Does everything in nature fits a pattern? I'm applying human tools and techniques to get color stripes from photos. The result is a set of random stripes. But when I duplicate them to make a larger design, a pattern always emerges.
In experiment #4 I managed to create random stripes, but they didn't come easily, they came with quite a bit of mental effort. It got me asking the question, is anything in nature truly random? Permaculture leans toward answering that question with "no." Curious, I brought the question of randomness in nature to the permies.com forums. It lead to an extremely interesting discussion, which you can read for yourself by following that link.
After thinking about the various views, my takeaway is that what we see and how we see it is a matter of perspective. For example, these fallen leaves
Trying to translate that to permaculture weaving will be a challenge. I'm not working with tangible objects such as growing zones, varieties of plants, weather patterns, the slope of the land, the type of soil, etc. I'm working with yarn, color, texture, and the interlacement of warp and weft. At best, I can create an abstract interpretation of what I see in nature.
Artists and artisans must focus on details to decide how to interpret them with their art or craft. In weaving, this is the basis of weaving draft design. My challenge will be applying my knowledge of weaving to what I observe in nature. Should be fun.



