Posted by: lavernewaddington | May 24, 2024

Backstrap Weaving – Are Two Sides Better than One?

The teal supplementary weft travels from selvedge to selvedge of the band and you can just make out the little teal bumps along the edge where the weft exits one shed and turns to enter the next.
In this silk scarf project I used 60/2 silk as the structural weft in the sections that didn’t have pattern and changed to a 140/2 structural weft when I added the supplementary weft.
I carried the supplementary weft from selvedge to selvedge to create the patterns at the two ends of the scarf. The little flower motifs in the main body were woven using the “frame” technique.
All the samples here used the “selvedge-to-selvedge” technique except the white band with turquoise pattern second from the right. There you can see how the turquoise weft turns on the surface of the cloth to frame the pattern of triangles.
The dark brown base, stem and branches of these plant figures were created with this wrapping technique. All other parts of the patterns were created using the “frame” technique.
The upper pattern of horizontal and vertical lines was woven using the wrapping technique.
The scarf I wove using various Bhutanese motifs and two supplementary-weft patterning techniques.
You can see the front and back of this profusely patterned head sash from Aguacatan, Guatemala on the left. The back is plain red. The supplementary weft threads only travel within the shed or float on the upper face of the fabric. They never appear on the back.
This is the back of my learning piece that I wove with one of my Guatemalan teachers. You can see all the weft tails have been left hanging. They could be cut shorter and left there or snipped off flush with the fabric.
This fabric that I was told is from Chichcastenango, Guatemala is part of a huipil that has been worn and laundered over many years. You can see how the weft tails have become tangled in a merry mess on the back.
I like the back of my textiles in these techniques to be open and plain. This is the back of the paisley scarf I showed above. Creating a “clean” back is, of course, is easy to do when the supplementary weft runs from selvedge to selvedge. When there are various color changes happening across the width of the warp as there are in the Guatemalan textiles that I’ve shown here, there’ll be many more weft tails with which to deal and carefully snip at the back of the cloth.
You can see the two faces of the Guatemalan textile on the left showing the double-faced nature of this technique. On the right is my own attempt at the pair of Guatemalan quetzal birds.
This little bee pattern is the first double-faced one that I learned with my teacher. You can see that it almost looks like a cross-stitch pattern with it’s identical “stitches” stacked neatly in columns.

Responses

  1. texturas.taller's avatar

    Me divierte mucho tu pregunta. ¿Cuántas veces pensé lo mismo?

    Es muy bello tejer en las dos caras pero creo que no es fácil encontrarle utilidad a la tela para que puedan realmente verse ambos lados. Mirando tus tejidos, pensé en un biombo. Una tela lo suficientemente opaca y rígida que esté enmarcada en un biombo de madera (por ejemplo), seguro que se vería en ambas caras. Estos tejidos, como vos contás, generan telas gruesas que tranquilamente pueden funcionar como un panel. Sobre este tema, ultimamente llegué a una conclusión: los tejidos en dos caras son ideales para colgar del aire! Es como si hubieran estado pensados para una muestra de arte. También pienso que, además del placer de tejer para la misma tejedora quizás, en su origen, las 2 caras tuvieran una función más ritual: el diseño estaba ahí adentro y todos lo sabían. Quizás esa sea también una manera de entender la práctica de tejidos en 3 capas en faz de urdimbre. La cara interna nunca será vista! Hace poco empecé a elaborar un escrito sobre este tema y por eso ando pensando en las 3 dimensiones. Mucha suerte con tus experimentos en trama suplementaria! Espero que nos sigas contando.

    Laura Dubinsky, Buenos Aires.

    • lavernewaddington's avatar

      Muchas gracias, Laura. Me encanta la idea de un biombo!

  2. Stefania's avatar

    una tenda

  3. Wendy Garrity's avatar

    Maybe a reversible wrist cuff?

  4. Wendy Garrity's avatar

    Or belt or bookmark?

  5. Berna's avatar

    Beautiful pieces. And fascinating techniques!


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