Posted by: lavernewaddington | March 15, 2024

Backstrap Weaving – Wonderfully Wide

The warp is made up of white and cochineal-dyed cotton from Guatemala. I dyed some of the white black.
The finished backstrap which doubles as a loom and tool tote bag.
An ikat shawl weaver from Tacabamba, Peru, standing to manage the wide cotton warp on her loom.
My Montagnard (Vietnamese hill tribe) teachers always use the beams and swords that are designed for the widest pieces of skirt and blanket fabric that they weave no matter how narrow the piece they happen to be weaving.
I wasn’t one hundred percent sure about the size of this silk thread but after fishing out silk examples from my stash drawer that range from 30/2 to 140/2, I came to the conclusion that the variegated is most likely 10/2 and the white 20/2.
I felt that I’d already explored the idea of a variegated ikat pattern in this piece (although the thread in this case isn’t actually variegated. It’s just a mix of lots of different colored ends of warp). I had to look back at this to be reminded that I hadn’t particularly liked the effect at the time (although it’s funny how things can grow on you!)
When I do ikat on a multi-colored warp, I prefer having wide stripes of color so that there’s only one color in each pattern segment, as you can see in this silk example I made some years ago.
This covered book that I created is already living in Australia. I dug up photos to see what the various colors of supplementary weft looked like in the upper and lower foliage patterns. Again, it isn’t variegated thread but rather a combination of four strands of three different colors. In this case the supplementary weft is used as the positive part of the pattern on the green background.
In this example, the gold supplementary weft has filled the negative space around the flower pattern which is revealed in the black ground cloth. The red patterning shows the use of supplementary weft in both positive and negative space.
The pattern needs to be busy so that there are never any excessively long floats of the white supplementary weft.
Off the warping stakes and onto the loom. As usual, when winding wide warps, I wind several small sections removing them one by one from the warping stakes and placing them on the loom beams that are waiting nearby on the floor. I don’t take any risks with having my warping stakes lean, even if ever so slightly, by having too much thread loaded onto them.
It’s normally my habit to start with a selvedge in which case I would remove those cardboard strips and start weaving right at the base of the warp. However, I decided to leave them in place this time. Although the two aren’t visible in this photo, I can tell you that the 10/2 silk and doubled 20/2 seem to working together well.
I’ll have a choice in the style of hummingbird figures….either using the supplementary weft to “draw” the swirls within their bodies as can be seen on the left, or use the weft to fill in the negative space within their bodies so that the swirls appear the underlying ground cloth, as on the right. I’m leaning towards the latter but maybe a combination of both?
The lake had alligators in it!


Responses

  1. pamelacrossc3cdf27159's avatar

    Fascinating as ever but perhaps even more so this time!

    Re Asian weavers going very wide, they often get the width by joining two identical strips together. I think particularly of the pua kumbu of the Iban in Borneo where the ikat for the two panels is tied together, then separated and woven as 2 strips. The Toba Batak in North Sumatra, Indonesia, in their ragidup and pinunsaan weave the centre broad width and then sew on side pieces to frame it.

    All the very best with your current project. I look forward to reading future installments in you blog.

    Best, Pamela

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Thanks, Pamela. While combining strips of woven cloth to create width is one way (commonly done here in South America), I’ve seen pictures of Indonesian women seated at their backstrap looms managing extraordinary widths…much wider than is the norm here in the Andean countries. It’s these on-loom widths that strike me rather than the pieced together fabrics.
      It’s lovely to hear from you and know that you’re still here reading my blog.

      • pamelacrossc3cdf27159's avatar

        Thanks, Laverne. I have been trying to think of the very wide, backstrap loom woven, Asian weavings which are not sewn for width and I can’t think of any at the moment.

        Yes, I look forward to your posts and always read them with interest and admiration.

        Best wishes, Pamela

      • lavernewaddington's avatar

        The question is how wide is very wide? I’m thinking of it in terms of the limitations of the loom. As a backstrap weaver I know how challenging it can be when you’re having to extend beyond your comfortable reach to insert swords and the long shuttle in the sheds without shifting your body weight so much that you tip the loom. So, my idea of very wide might not be the same as someone else’s.


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