An exploration of handwoven textiles through techniques, structures and projects
Learn about wool and how to spin and weave
The new Weaving Barn
Huck Lace
460 ends of 30/2 silk on the loom for a new project in huck lace. It's a shawl design by Susan Foulkes that caught my eye. You can see hers here
Advancing twill

Warping wheel in action!
First time using the new handbuilt warping wheel. Maybe a little slower than bobbins and tension box for a warp with many colour changes, but much less fiddly, more sure and less stressful. Also much less waste! I had to make a couple of changes to the wheel, I realised the arm holding the raddle for winding on was on the wrong side of the wheel (it would have had to rotate the wrong way) and I moved the holder to align better with the warp on the wheel.
This next project will be an extended advancing twill on 8 shafts in 8/2 cotton with a set of 25epi - it'll make a bedhead cushion, a scarf and maybe something small.
Building a warping wheel
I've heard only good things about the American made AVL warping wheel but at 900 euros in Europe it is rather expensive. It doesn't seem too complicated so I'm making my own. A few old bobbins, some cheap timber, mdf, a handful of bolts and a dog comb for the raddle has 95% of the materials covered. The only piece I've been struggling with finding is the brake drum (turned on a lathe on the original). After much head scratching I found a drive pulley for a lawnmower which will work. For the clip I used an old feeler guage which has the right amount of spring to grip the thread.
Dog comb raddle, the holes originally connected the handle, but are now used for the locking pin.Double layer shawl
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Almost a thousand warp ends wound
More samples
More doubleweave sampling....getting closer. This time superwash merino warp 30/2 with jaggerspun 8/2 for the shrinking ties. Lambswool/linen/silk 1/7 singles for the weft. A single cloth selvedge to give a wrinkly edge. I also tried more ties in a the shrinkable wool (one each side of the squares) but they have a tendency to migrate during the long floats and become unruly!
Unfortunately after I failed to get enough shrinkage with a hot handwash it went in the washing machine and is now 2/3 size and overfulled (I had to prise the layers apart) but the double layers between the squares give the fabric a lovely volume.
Third time lucky and all should be project ready for a shawl. I think I ll put the red stripe back in the middle of the squares and space them wider apart. I ll return to the yellow for one side of the shawl this time in superwash merino.
Double weave experiments
More experiments with doubleweave. This is a weave whereby two layers of cloth are woven simultaneously one above the other. I designed a fabric with two layers of cotton (16/2) plain weave at 24epi sandwiching free floating red woolen threads between them. At intervals the cloths are woven together as a single cloth in a series of squares. These also trap the red threads. Between the squares the red wool yarn is either tight puffing the two layers apart when it shrinks on washing, or very loose allowing it to free form.
The first sample was at two close a sett, so the red threads were only visible with back light. I widened the sett to 15epi for a second sample with almost a gauze like structure.
I also wove a sample as single cloth with a fine lambswool warp, but used the double layers as squares. In the single cloth the wool is tightly held by the warp, but in the more open sett of the double layer it can shrink and create a seersucker effect.
Planning to use this knowledge on a scarf project next.
A trio of homespun scarves

Bateman boulevard scarves
An exploration of Bateman boulevard. These three scarfs are from the same warp in 8/2 bamboo yarn, just fringes and finishing to do.
more double weave with 2 structures
more bumpy experiments
Saw an interesting picture on instagram and converted to a weave. I hadn't realised I would need a supplemental warp for blue, as of course it has less interlacement and so needs a different tension.












































