"Ladis[sic] Fancy" by Jacob Biesecker (1825) |
I like this group for several reasons. I get to spend time researching weaves I would already research because I'm interested in historical weaving. There are a lot of fairly high-level weavers that belong to it, so the samples are unusual, interesting fabrics. And, I have actual, touchable samples of cloth. However, I owe samples.
I have no good excuse for not weaving the samples beside the usual: I was busy. I forgot. I got sidetracked researching an obscure weave structure. No matter--those samples are due, and I've pressed my luck by delaying until the end of March to send off my samples for 2022. However, no more procrastinating!
"Ladies Fancy," in 10/2 cotton, on the loom. |
This time last week, I started beaming 6 yards of 10/2 unmercerized cotton from Georgia Yarn Company. This stuff is luxe--soft, nice twist, and just enough wax to make it really manageable. 607 ends later, and I had a beamed warp. After a day or two of running errands and taking care of other tasks in my overly busy life, I disassembled the front of Bertie and started threading heddles. I haven't finished dressing a loom that fast in a long time--less than 9 hours later, the warp was threaded, sleyed, tied on, tensioned, and the header woven. I even managed to weave the first sixty picks of the samples!
I had hoped to weave off the entire warp in a single day (something else I haven't done in a long time) but I simply can't weave that fast, or that long, any more. I did manage at least two yards each day, along with everything else I needed to do (including spending 90 minutes down at the office this morning) and cut the cloth off the loom this afternoon.
All in all, I think it looks pretty good. The brick-colored weft (also from Georgia Yarn Company) really makes the design pop, and the floats are small enough that the fabric will wear well. It feels like it has a nice hand--a bit too thin for kitchen towels, but perfect for napkins or a tablecloth. I should have about 4 3/4 yards once it comes out of the dryer, so there's not only plenty for samples, but for some napkins for the drawer.
Now, what am I going to weave for my 2023 samples?