I didn't grab a photo of the newer ones - but here they are amonst my modest stash of weaving yarns. Mostly 8/2 cotton, some 10/2 and some 12/2, I am planning to experiment and see what I like best. I have a preference for Blues and Greys and I am trying to combat that with some yellow and greens. These are called 'tubes' - at least in America, something which amuses me. At $30= per 'tube' it take a little 'investment' to build a coherent colour palette - and a weaving project can wipe out 2-3 of these in one go.
So .. playing safe, although not as safe as a white or cream warp I decided the warp would be a light to dark gradient - still fairly safe but one that allows me to play with lots of different colours in the weft - this is planning for a batch of tea towels.
I am beginning to feel comfortable using the Ashford warping mill - finding that sweet spot with just enough push to make it rotate enough to wind the yarn from top to bottom - or bottom to top in one smooth motion. The guide thread was a strong bright orange and I loved the way it popped against the black thread. I think I will be back to the yarn suppliers looking for a tube of that orange.
At
that point I discovered I am a beginner, this is probably only my 6th
weaving project. I began to 'sley the reed' (gotta love the weaving
terminology) - and realised that I had a warp for only half the width I
needed. I had downloaded a warp/weft calculation spreadsheet and trusted
it - a quick manual check of the calculations revealed one of the
formulates wasn't working. I don't blame the sheet - it was excel and I
opened it in Apple Pages and may have accidentally broken it while
working out how numbers worked. End result one half of the warp I need -
I have updated the calculations and will make the other half the warp
and then work them onto the loom.
And Frank slept through the entire thing...
na Stella
1 comment:
Ah, cats. They're so helpful, aren't they? I'm looking forward to seeing how these turn out!
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