Another birthday comes and goes. I was given some lovely mini cheesecakes by a friend and we went out for a stroll around the street market that starts a block and half from my place before having a birthday lunch. Every now and then I go to this market looking for cochineal. The ladies that sell the home remedies are the ones that have it but it seemed that the source had dried up as I hadn’t been able to find any this year.
The market is big and, being in good company, we chatted and ventured further into the market than I normally find it necessary to do on my own. It paid off. I actually found the cochineal mother lode. I just bought a little and then snapped photos all around to make sure that I’ll be able to find this particular vendor again.
I often forget how different these markets must seem to my weaving friends who live outside South America. I generally don’t feel secure taking my phone out when I am at the market. This comes from experience! In fact, I don’t usually take it with me at all. But, because I had an extra pair of eyes with me on this day, I brought it along and took a few photos along the way.
And then I came across another surprise. It seemed that they were stacking up for my birthday. I have never seen anyone selling hand-spun wool down here in the tropical lowlands in all the years that I have been here. In fact, there isn’t any industrially-spun wool to be found either. On this day there were three balls of handspun wool hanging in amongst the home remedies in this little store owned by a lady from Potosi.
We talked spinning and weaving and she searched about to find her spindle to show me. It wasn’t particularly fine yarn but it was such a novelty to find it here and so nice to chat with this lady that I simply had to buy a ball of it. I’ll dye it with the cochineal that I just bought.
And with this I broke my vow to only work from stash but what the heck, it was my birthday.
One more stop was made at the many aisles of the indoor part of the market where the sewing supplies are sold. I needed a long zip in a certain color for the loom carry bag that I was making.

So, this is what has been on my loom. I showed you the warp of Mayan Hands cotton from Guatemala in my last post. I dyed the black and there are two shades of cochineal red that were dyed in Guatemala.

The black and white section would enable me to weave several kinds of patterning styles and I decided to weave this in rep weave….alternating thick and thin weft. That would make a sturdy bag and a cushy backstrap. You might remember my plan to make a carry bag for my loom that could double as a backstrap.
I chose a pattern that I had used on a silk wrist cuff some years ago. I had woven it using the complementary-warp intermesh structure with a pattern from Joanne Hall’s book on Mexican Tapestry weaving.
I first had to weave a sample to see how many strands I needed to make up the thick weft. Then I could get underway. Because I hadn’t used this Mayan Hands cotton in a large plain-weave project before and had only woven a tiny sample with it, I was a bit unsure about being able to set the width of the large project correctly right from the start. It’s quite common to start off too narrow. Threads that are sitting side by side along two cross sticks sit one above the other along the cloth beam and this can trick you into misjudging the width of the cloth. So, I did what I do if I am weaving with new-to-me yarn and placed four narrow strips of cardboard within the first four sheds so that I could see how the threads sit side by side.

The motif is a complementary-warp pick-up pattern made up of two-span floats and very occasionally a three-span. Any section of white in a row that doesn’t have any white directly above or below it in the preceding or following row will be made up of three-span floats. Being complementary-warp, the piece is double-faced. It’s very straightforward. You just have to remember that vertical lines of white need to be broken up by picking up black threads in the thin-weft rows.
And here it is off the loom. I wove the start and finish only with thin weft so that they would be easier to hem. I also split them into two halves because they would become sleeves into which I would thread the cords for the backstrap. This will be clearer later when you see images of the cords in place.


I still have to test the ideal length of the white cords so that I can cut and bind them off. I also need to decide on the best way to affix a carry strap. I’m going to let it sit for a bit while I think about that.

What’s next? Maybe some dyeing with cochineal and perhaps a longer version of the little box-like purse that I recently made. I have a lot of fine Guatemalan cotton for that in a color the vendor called champagne. I need to come up with a pattern for it in supplementary weft.
Keep busy lest you be accused of sloth! I was amused to see this depiction of the seven deadly/mortal sins in an episode of QI. A spinner was used to represent Sloth. How dare they! I couldn’t get a close enough view of the spinner during the program to be able to understand what that was all about. But I did find an image online and was able to see that her spindle, laden with yarn, was lying idle on the ground….the horror.
See you next time!










RSS - Posts


















Happy Birthday! Sounds like a lovely way to spend your day.
By: Jacquie on August 17, 2023
at 12:57 am
Thank you much for the birthday wishes! I do like that I spent it here appreciating this place in which I’ve chosen to live all these years.
By: lavernewaddington on August 18, 2023
at 3:52 pm
What a happy birthday it looks to have been!
Thank you for sharing the photos and memories and the beautiful bag.
By: Jim on August 17, 2023
at 2:17 am
I’m always so happy to hear from you, Jim. I think of you each time I use the little shuttles you made and gave me.
By: lavernewaddington on August 18, 2023
at 3:51 pm
Here’s a totally non weaving related comment. Probably more of a linguistic or religious or maybe cultural comment. And so off the wall – feel free to ignore. When I learned the the 7 deadly sins – in a Catholic school in New Jersey in probably 1960 – when I was in 7th grade – they were taught to me as Pride, Covetousness, Lust, Anger, Gluttony, Envy and Sloth. The order and words used (and of course the old English calligraphy wasn’t there either) are slightly different. Is that just St. James vs the Catholic Bible? Or is there some value or judgement in the order? Or not at all important? But you obviously learned to avoid being accused of sloth – you’re one of the most productive people I’ve ever met. Keep on weaving and teaching and exploring. un fuerte abrazo – Virginia
By: Virginia on August 18, 2023
at 5:30 am
Hi Virginia. I went to Catholic school too throughout the 60s and 70s but I don’t recall ever having been taught these deadly sins at school. Certainly I remember my mother mentioning them a time or two most likely when I was being lazy or fighting with my brother! I published your comment because maybe someone else will reply and answer your questions.
By: lavernewaddington on August 18, 2023
at 3:50 pm
Happy Birthday Laverne! Your project bag/backstrap is amazing and genius. I’ve been weaving rep weave on an 8-harness loom and using a normal percentage of width shrinkage was not enough, it’s a learning curve! Thank you for sharing your detailed notes.
By: Kelli Page on August 18, 2023
at 10:46 am
Thanks, Kelli! I have committed the 8th deadly sin by not wet-finishing this piece. It’s a nice tight weave plus I didn’t expect there to be any change in terms of improving the feel of the cotton which doesn’t feel like it has oils or other residues. It’s a very raw feeling non-mercerized cotton and the black has already spent a lot of time in hot water during my washing and dyeing process. The red was dyed with cochineal in Guatemala. Also, I haven’t laundered any of my other backstraps and figure I probably won’t do so with this one either. I did read a few blogs about rep weave and read about one weaver’s experience with losing a lot more length than she had expected. I washed the little one I wove years ago when it came off the loom but I didn’t take measurements because it really was just an experiment and size was not critical. I remember having to pull it back into shape when it was wet. It happened to fit my tray table and that was just by luck! I’d love to hear about the percentage figures that you come up with when you’re done.
By: lavernewaddington on August 18, 2023
at 3:46 pm
Morning from New Jersey! For my Repp Weave Placemats I had 27% in length as opposed to 10% allowed shrinkage in length.
For width, it worked out to be 6%, which I tested 2 ways, I dried one placemat in the dryer and the 2nd was laid flat to dry, both shrunk by 6%.
It was the length shrinkage that shocked me! Also these were woven with 8/2 unmercerized cotton.
Just to share I have a project on my big loom that I have had in my mind since the early 90’s! Too funny!
Thanks for the inspiration Laverne, ENJOY THE DAY!
By: Kelli Page on September 30, 2023
at 2:00 pm
Kelli, thanks so much for sharing that. Yes, the length shrinkage is pretty shocking! This is really useful information. As for your early-90s-inspired project, I hope it’s going well. Hugs!
By: lavernewaddington on October 31, 2023
at 4:20 pm