Showing posts with label Bateman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bateman. Show all posts

Bateman Park 303

Warping underway for 4 table-runners in two designs off the same warp based on Bateman Park (303) weave. The 7.2m warp is in 8/2 red cotton with 8/4 cotton in alternating blue and white on shafts 2, 3, 5 and 7 which create a counterpoint to the main pattern. The weft is 16/2 white cotton for the tabby, with blue, orange or white in 8/2 cotton for the rest. Sett is 9 epcm (24 epi) for a fairly stiff cloth.

I spent a long time playing with colours and the final choice (subject to sampling) is much simpler than my first designs!

First few sections completed until I ran out of red yarn!

 Draft showing the edge (right handside) and part of the centre panel for the first pair of runners, Starting point was Bateman's Park sample 303-2. 

The second pair, which started as Bateman's Park sample 303-6.


Weaving underway but not without a few hiccups. After the first six inches of weaving I realised the pattern was all wrong. Eventually I figured out that I d tied up the loom for the second design but was treadling for the first. After redoing the tie up things seemed better but still not quite right. After more investigation I deduced that the draft I d produced for the second design had a slightly different warp threading to the first, In one I had groups of 1, 8, 2, 8 and in the other they were 1, 8, 3, 8.  Too late to change, so I'll have a slightly different fabric for the first design.

The second design has quite a bit of texture in the orange sections, we'll see how this plays out in wet finishing.




The runners finished

curtains revisited

I'm revisiting the first weave I designed a few years ago. It made curtains for the kitchen but they were always a little bit too small and it's been annoying me ever since. So I'm weaving some more fo the fabric to widen each curtain. Four different coloured bobbins makes for a crowded workspace!


The finished fabric on the curtains

Bateman extended manifold twill

With the 8 shaft countermarch loom conversion now complete, I am determined to design my own weave. After lots of reading I ve become interested in the work of Dr William Bateman. A former chemist who in the 1950's turned to weaving and created many new weave structures.  His extended manifold twills particularly captured my imagination. 


Numerous software packages are available to help weavers design and after some exploration of the alternatives I plumped for Fibreworks. I think Weavepoint is more powerful but also a lot more expensive. The program is fairly intuitive and after a lot of experimenting I finished my draft. I had to make decisions about yarn and sett, something I'm still in experienced about. I plumped for 8/2 cotton warped at 24epi (with some 10/2 blue warp threads left over from the last project). The pattern weft is also 8/2 cotton with the alternating tabby in 16/2 cotton.

the draft in Fibreworks

After winding the warp (7m of it to make curtains for the kitchen), I began dressing the loom front to back, but soon realised I'd missed out the blue warp! I had to wind a spool for each thread and suspend them from various bits of string when it came to eventually wind the warp on the back beam.  It wasn't easy but thankfully it worked.


The draft requires four different colours of weft so four shuttles. Another new skill is learning to keep them all to hand, without them falling on the floor or getting tangled. Yet again, my tie-up is upside down so the face of the fabric is not visible as I weave, only when it reaches the cloth beam.


It took quite a while to weave the 7m of fabric and the loom bring set up in the spare room meant a few hours of weaving each evening. Once the 7m was complete, I experimented with some different coloured warps and treadling patterns to make some fabric for the curtain tie-backs.

Off the loom I washed the fabric and realised that I'd forgotten to allow for shrinkage in my calculations! The curtains are consequently not very full - in fact they barely reach in the middle. One day I ll have to weave some more fabric and extend them. Despite the 24epi in 8/2 its still a very drapey fabric.