Posted by: lavernewaddington | August 12, 2021

Backstrap Weaving – Thinking Outside the Walls

Is there anybody out there?! This was taken on a visit many years ago to the fabulous Salar de Uyuni here in Bolivia.

Fully vaccinated (albeit with the Sinopharm one in which I have little faith), I decided it was time to think outside the walls and venture out for my first outing, since the arrival of Covid-19 in Bolivia, that didn’t involve the supermarket or the dentist.

What would I find out there? Would I find that I have been behaving in an overly cautious way all this time and perhaps one of the few still hiding away within walls?

Would everything be completely normal? After all, we are not under any kind of restrictions now. Case, hospitalization and death numbers rise and fall from day to day as the third-wave curve wends its way downward. The fourth wave has already been predicted to arrive in October. Have we all just learned to live with this?

I have always been good at physical distancing! This was taken on a visit to a large expanse of sand dunes that inexplicably emerge from the surrounding jungle right here in Santa Cruz where I live.

This outing wasn’t about visiting spectacular salt lakes or mysterious sand dunes. It was simply about eating a burger with a friend in one of my old favorite hang-outs…the main Plaza here in the center of Santa Cruz. I used to live one and a half blocks away from it and would pass through it every day on my way to and from work. After finishing work at 10pm, I used to love stopping to sit there on balmy summer nights. The place would be full of activity as others gathered to enjoy the relative coolness of the evening before reluctantly heading home to face a restless night within heated walls.

My companion suggested the Plaza. The thought of being amongst all those people doing something that required the removal of masks made me nervous, even though it was an outdoor setting.

A typical sunny weekend afternoon would see the Plaza completely full…standing room only… as families gathered to eat ice cream and watch the world go by. There would be wandering coffee cart vendors in their crisp white uniforms, others selling cotton candy, balloon animals and toys and trinkets, people feeding the pigeons, kids chasing the pigeons, teenagers gathered in their little groups in every corner, the shoe shine guys poised ready for the next customer, elderly men playing chess surrounded by youngsters studying their moves, wanna-be models having their photos taken outside the cathedral. The Municipal Police would be strolling around although it is hard to imagine anything “bad” happening in that place of good clean fun. In a city in which it is often impossible to escape the blast of salsa and cumbia music, the Plaza is blissfully music-free.

And so it was with a mixture of relief and sadness that we found the Plaza almost deserted. There was no need to make circuits while looking for a place in the shade. Clearly people are being careful and largely staying home which is a big ask when home can often be a simple adobe or single brick dwelling, the interior of which resembles a pizza oven on hot days. It was sad to see this popular cooling refuge abandoned in this way.

Yes, I admit that it is strange to be writing several paragraphs about an outing to get a burger! So I’ll get back to the weaving now. In my last post I showed you the start of my hummingbird piece. This is another effort to think outside the walls and capture a feeling of uninhibited movement and joy.

I am weaving this in warp-faced double weave. It is certainly not the fastest patterning technique that I know. However, you might remember that I have just spent seven months picking up threads one by one to form intricate patterns on four panels. As a result, nothing feels slow any more and I just simply enjoy watching each and every one of the little figures I have created emerge. I loved designing the plants and piecing all the figures together. Weaving this lifts my spirits!

This is the final third of the band which I photographed so that you can see what the two faces look like. The plant at the very top is the one which is showering the scene with its parachuting seeds.

There was never meant to be an end product but I did find myself thinking about cutting this strip into three and sewing the pieces side by side to make something useful. But then a couple of people in a recent band-weaving Zoom gathering suggested weaving two more strips to flank this one. They could reveal more of the garden that surrounds this happy scene. I like that idea. It spares me the agony of having to do any cutting. All of you who produce hand woven cloth will know exactly what I mean. Plus it gives me a chance to do some more designing in this fun double- weave structure. It amazes me how far removed this is from the kind of pieces that I generally choose to weave.

And so I get to sprawl on the floor and do some more double-weave doodling. The chart for the hummingbird piece ended up being 130 inches long! I suppose I could photograph it in sections, erase the drawings and re-use the paper.

I was very pleased to see that Vicky Erker has been designing her own double-weave motifs after having learned the technique from my book Warp-faced Double Weave on Inkle Looms. My book includes a section on designing in which I use a leaf motif as the example. Some people take to designing more easily and quickly than others while some have no desire to design at all and are happy weaving from charts that have been provided in books.

This striking hand petroglyph is the first pattern that Vicki showed me…..

And then she blew me away with this pattern that she based on a Quetzal motif that is often used in textiles of Guatemala. In Guatemala it is woven using completely different patterning structures.. Isn’t that awesome!

If you are wondering about the H and O lettering on Vicki’s swords. it is something I suggest doing to help you keep track of the shed in which you are working when weaving double weave. You can always mark tape and apply that to the sword if you don’t want to mark your sword. The H stands for Heddle Shed and the O for Open Shed. It is one of the tips I give weavers for working in double weave which of course will make much more sense when you are using the book. I hope you might consider trying warp-faced double weave. There are plenty of charts in the book and perhaps you will feel motivated to try creating some of your own designs.

When I was going through my old photos and finding the ones I posted earlier of the Uyuni Salt Lake and the sand dunes, one of my first thoughts on seeing those pictures, was…wow, not a single tree to which I could attach a backstrap loom! Of course, a tree would not be entirely necessary as backstrap weavers can turn themselves into completely self-contained looms using our feet or toes to hold the end of the warp.

Carolin shows here that if you happen to find yourself at the Uyuni salt lake while cycling from Alaska to Ushuaia, one’s bicycle can always provide a handy anchor point for the end of the warp….

Carolin with tiny loom tied to her bike and weaving on the salt lake.

Others have chosen to create something a little more comfortable that can be picked up, carried around and enjoyed both indoors and out. I don’t quite remember who started the frame-making thing in the Facebook group but several members have found these to be a really nice idea when they got fed up with looking for suitable places in their homes, both indoors and out, to which they can attach the ends of their warps. Here’s the one that Martina in Germany built….

Here’s Jenny’s with a clever pool-noodle hack to stop the beam from sliding….

And here are models by Carlos on the left and Rosemary on the right…

Ritika Mittal allowed me to show this image of a weaver in Nagaland using a study frame to hold the end of her warp and provide a nice place for her to brace her feet.

Nancy’s anchor point isn’t exactly a portable one, but I always enjoy seeing a simple backstrap warp being attached to the more complex floor loom…this is Nancy’s first ever backstrap loom project and its a beauty.

When I was having my Operating a Backstrap Loom class filmed, we had some trouble finding an anchor spot in the studio that was close enough to the set because I insisted on sitting on the floor. Eventually we managed to pile a lot of heavy stuff into a portable storage bin and use that.

While on the topic of that video class, Operating a Backstrap Loom, I’ll take this opportunity to let you know that the stock of DVDs is really low now and that I won’t be replacing them when Taproot Video runs out. The purchase of the Lifetime Streaming option caught up with, and now far outnumbers, the purchases of DVDs. So, if DVDs are your preference (they still are mine), you might want to make sure you get one while they are still around.

I showed Nancy’s first-ever weaving on a backstrap loom. I neglected to ask her if this piece is destined to become a backstrap. The dimensions are right. The backstrap itself is often a new backstrap-loom user’s first project and I am happy to see that the article I wrote about weaving your own backstrap way back in 2009 is still being used and enjoyed.

Here are a couple of backstraps that have been woven recently by Lieve on the left and Louise on the right….

My birthday is on Friday (lucky Friday the 13th) and I’ll hopefully be venturing outside the walls again for a little celebration.

Until next time.


Responses

  1. kathyo's avatar

    Happy Birthday!

  2. Kate Colwell's avatar

    Is it your birthday? Glad you are starting a “new year” with an outing. The transition is super weird for any of us who have sheltered at home and it stays weird as the numbers ebb and flow and we have to make new decisions daily. Be good to yourself Laverne. Glad you are vaccinated. Hugs from California.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thank you so much, Kate! You are right. It’s a good way to start this new year which is a big landmark one!

  3. endrickwater's avatar

    Your students’ achievements are a credit to your teaching. Well done to them all. And many happy returns for Friday.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thank you so much both for the birthday wish and for your kind comments on my teaching. I appreciate your taking a moment to leave a message.

  4. Martina Musil's avatar

    Danke für deine Blogbeiträge die mich die letzten Jahre begleiten. 😍
    Ich bin nicht geimpft und werde mich auch nicht impfen lassen. Anfangs war es seltsam wieder mehr nach draußen zu gehen, aber das wurde nach und nach besser, ist aber immer noch nicht so normal wie vorher.
    Bei uns sind die Menschem im Augenblick viel unterwegs und genießen die „Pause“ vor den nächsten Einschränkungen.
    Ich wünsche dir ganz fest dass du wieder Vertrauen ins Leben draußen findest. Fühl dich gedrückt und bleib gesund!!!
    Liebe Grüße
    Martina aus Deutschland 🙂

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Martina, thank you for your kind words and for all you contribute to our online group. I am not going to trust Google to translate a

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Martina, thank you for your kind words. I am not going to trust Google to translate my reply! but I know that you have a good understanding of English from your participation in our online group and would like to thank you for all that you contribute as well as the fact that you create a nice pathway for other German-speakers in the group.

  5. Kelli Page's avatar

    Happy Birthday! Thank you for posting the thoughtful suggestions on setting up a backstrap loom in the house. And it was interesting to see how your community is responding to the pandemic. Take a walk outside, it feeds the soul!

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thank you Kelli! <3. I walk up on the terrace every night and star gaze. I love watching the Southern Cross slowly doing its loop as we also see that constellation in Australia. It creates a connection wit that other home.

  6. Lisa's avatar

    I’m going to do warp faced double weave for my next project! I can’t wait to get into it. Your instructions are great but I won’t even begin to understand until I try it for myself.
    I have a request! If you find time somewhere in the future, would you consider a post on designing pebble weave patterns? I find it so baffling, because of the way the lines have to fit into the pebble structure. I know there’s a way, I just can’t figure it out!
    Stay safe, happy weaving!

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Lisa, thanks for your comments on the instructions. They will seem like odd nonsensical moves when you first start but the you will soon start to understand what is going on and it will all make sense and feel like a smooth process rather than a bunch of random steps. You have read my mind regarding designing for Andean Pebble Weave. That’s the book on which I am currently working!

      • Lisa's avatar

        That’s amazing! I cant wait to see it!

  7. one2travelfar's avatar

    Happy birthday. Enjoy those small ventures outside your home. Your hummingbird designs are fabulous. Some food comes out of long term isolation. ~lynne

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thank you for the birthday wish and the kind comment about my weaving, Lynne. It just occurred to me that you have been choosing long-term isolation for quite some time with your lighthouse caretaking and would very much understand emerging from that nourished and ready to take on new projects.

  8. Allyne Holz's avatar

    Happy Birthday. You are such a wonderful inspiration and teacher. The mochila bag I’m currently working on has kokopelli figures and, of course, one of your pebble weave patterns that look to me like music dancing.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thanks, Allyne! Your mochila bags are works of art. I am so curious about the dancing music pattern but will be patient and wait for you to complete the whole project.

  9. Jim's avatar

    Happy Birthday, Laverne!
    Beautiful and life-like hummingbirds.


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