Posted by: lavernewaddington | September 29, 2023

Backstrap Weaving – One Method doesn’t Fit All.

This is the mill-spun wool singles yarn that I bought from a farmer while weaving with friends in Petaluma, California.
Two of the plain-weave projects that I’ve completed with this wool….a travel documents pouch on the left and mobile phone case on the right.
Taming the mill-spun singles into a three-color pattern in the structure that I call Andean Pebble Weave.
Using 8/2 Tencel in the same structure.
The camera strap in which I could play with changing the background color, the hummingbird outline color and filler color. It was a bit brain bending but fun.
A little further along with some cloth already rolled up.
Now to decide on whether to join the three pieces without overlapping them using one of the decorative stitches that I’ve learned from my teachers here, or join them with the tiniest of seams.
The heddles from the two warps remained pretty much fluff-free. The one on the left is from the pattern warp and is discolored. I’m guessing that a fine film of fluff has discolored it.
This little pouch for my pin loom is made up of three pieces joined together with a tiny seam. The center is a piece I wove from my own handspun llama yarn that I was rescuing from an old project. I added sides made from the mill-spun wool singles.
A subtle joining stitch in cotton connecting two panels that don’t overlap. I’d woven a very long band on a circular warp and Karen-style backstrap loom that had been given to me. I cut the band into five pieces and joined them to make a table square.
The completed table square.
The stitch can be decorative as well as functional when worked in a contrasting color. I used it to join the panels of this wool lap blanket that I wove.
Another kind of stitch that my Vietnamese backstrap weaving teachers use. I used it to connect two bands and make a tool bag.
Sometimes the joining stitch can be one of the main features. I used this stitch which was shown to me by one of my teachers in the Bolivian highlands to join two cotton panels that I had woven. Maxima stitches it in many bright and lively colors.
Picture courtesy of PAZA Bolivia shows Maxima’s carrying cloth with its colorful joining stitches.
Natural brown handspun cotton singles waiting to be washed. I use these metal mesh pencil cups to hold the thread under tension in the pot.


Responses

  1. Lisa Ferreira's avatar

    I’m looking to seam together some bands to make a bigger piece of fabric, now I have all kinds of options.

    And I’m still eagerly hoping you make a manual for three color pebbleweave ^^

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      That’s great. I hope you can use some of the ideas I have shown here.

  2. CrafticalSkills's avatar

    I use a livestock detangler called Cowboy Magic super bodyshine for combing, carding, and post-scour, as well as to help with velcro-level-challenging-warp.

    I do sometimes kind of like the smooth feel of a light simmered flaxseed-gel sizing on unmercerized cotton, though.

  3. zolandimande's avatar

    Thanks for these videos. I’ve simply made starch and applied it on my warp with my hands. It does get hard which I don’t like. Best is to just move gently with the weaving…shed by shed.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Yes, that’s also the best for me, I think. I am betting one day I ‘ll want to use a material that defeats me, though.

  4. endrickwater's avatar

    All sorts of lessons in this post, so thank you.
    You wouldn’t know the name of the joining stitch used by your Vietnamese teacher by any chance? I’d be very interested in learning it.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      You’re welcome. I once saw that stitch in an embroidery book and it was named Van Dyke Stitch. You might even find a video on YouTube.

  5. ingridcc's avatar

    Hi Laverne, your pieces are gorgeous as usual!
    I think the term for the ‘poofing’ up of the yarn in hot water may be ‘to bloom’ at least that’s the term I’ve read for when yarn or finished objects are wet-finished/ washed. I don’t often dye but sometimes I prewash yarn before using it, and aside from shedding excess dye, it usually shrinks a bit in length and get fuller, softer and stretchier. I’ve always assumed that gently immersing yarn in hot soapy water or dye just lets the fibers relax from their ultra-stretched out state from being combed and spun and rolled into balls, so it’s not quite the same thing as the way wool ‘fulls’ and shrinks if you actually agitate it in the hot water.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Hello Ingrid! So nice to hear from you. Thank you so much fur supplying that term and for sharing your knowledge about working with wool.

  6. sandy chatelle's avatar

    I use plain Knox gelatin and hot water for sizing before warping and in a spray bottle for emergencies while weaving.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thank you. One day….. maybe I will too!

  7. skadibuchheister's avatar

    Thank you Laverne for the interesting post! You speak from my heart when you talk about opening the shed with sticky yarn! I’m looking forward to your instructions for three-color pebble weaving! Best regards from Germany
    Skadi

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Hi Skadi. Yes, I’m sure you’ve been there many a time too!


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