Showing posts with label Rep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rep. Show all posts

Beginnings

Late August 2018 and my neighbour Alain is clearing out his attic and has an old loom in pieces that has been there for decades. I decide to "have a go" at weaving, so save it from the tip.  After looking at a glimrakra website I figure out how the loom is assembled and make up a few missing pieces. The loom isn't a glimakra, but has a similar design. It's a counterbalance four shaft loom with 6 treadles a 90cm weaving width....and some woodworm!

I buy a couple of "learn to weave" books, read them and try to work out how to do it. It's pretty difficult to understand until you actually do it, so I launch into a project in "The big book of weaving" by Laila Lundell, called Large checked rep rug.


I realise that there are a number of missing components - a lot of yarn, a bobbin rack, a warping frame and lots more heddles. I purchase the yarn and make everything else. Fortunately a bag of wooden spools came with the loom.

Home made warping frame

Bobbin rack

4 nails and string suffice to make hundreds of heddles

I know nothing of weaving and with hindsight, perhaps a rep weave with 2760 ends of 16/2 cotton in four colours might not have been the best choice for a first project! I sucessfully wind the warp in two chains then after using the reed as a raddle, attempt to wind the warp onto the back beam. 

Unsure of how much warp waste there would be, I think my warp was about 4m long. This was fortunate as almost immediately the warp tangled into a birds nest! It took about a day to slowly wind the warp, untangling as I went and about the last meter was eventually abandoned. The sett was 36 epcm (91epi) and with only a 40/10 reed, some tangling was inevitable with zero experience.

Tackling threading the heddles is next and this proves to be rather back breaking and a very long process. The loom is not well designed to allow this. I do a little at a time.



It's now June...nearly a year since acquiring the loom and finally I'm tied on and ready to weave.


With a thick mop yarn alternating with a doubles thread of 16/2 the weaving goes very fast. the heavy overhead beater makes tight packing of the weft easy and all the weaving is over in a few evenings.


the selvedges might be the neatest or straightest but I'm pleased with my first home weave.