undyedyarnpire: cartoon voodoo doll, looks like knitting needles stuck everywhere (Default)
[personal profile] undyedyarnpire posting in [community profile] creativity
 I started weaving on a new rigid heddle loom I got for the holidays. My first project was a scarf, as recommended by everyone. 

This is the resulting scarf:
woven scarf 

And here is the background of the project


I used handdyed yarn for the warp (Knitpicks Strolll "bare", dyed with food coloring.) Just the red/pink skein:  

 

The weft yarn is 2-ply handspun corriedale (fiber dyed by Spunky Eclectic for the May 2008 fiber club shipment, spun in Sept 2008, yarn named "Rose Rot"):
  

This is how it looked in progress. The paper underneath the loom is the standard 8.5x11, placed for scale.



  

Now I am attempting to form the 8" by 48" strip of woolly fabric into a bag. I have seen the Doni's Deli bag, bags from placemats, and come up with a theoretical diagram myself. But I am having a lot of trouble envisioning how it would work. There is not a really good way to just keep it as a scarf because the corriedale yarn is extremely harsh after weaving (not like corriedale is especially nice anyway. I have no idea why it got popular since it is the same price as something better. My opinion, obviously.)  I wrote a whole post talking about this, but I have interfacing, lining fabric, a sewing machine, and someone with sewing skills who can help me. (The sewing machine scares me.)


So, since no one else has posted anything here yet, let me say that I will gratefully accept any and all praise. I realize this is not the polished work of a professional weaver. I realize it's effing pink. But I think it came out completely awesome and it would be great to hear from people who agree with that.

However, if you have practical suggestions on either the weaving, the process of the weaving (which was horrid and so unenjoyable that I am considering selling my loom),  or on how to actually build a bag from a tiny piece of fabric.

Date: 2011-01-07 07:19 am (UTC)
weaverbird: (Handspun)
From: [personal profile] weaverbird
LOL I know what you mean re: your husband's reaction. It definitely takes some of the fun out of it if you have to explain why your work is so awesome.

If your first yarn fell apart, it sounds like we started at opposite ends of the spectrum! I was all about overspinning, so I got yarn that was rock hard and gnarly - although that overtwist came in handy once I learned to ply!

Ah, yep, burning yourself during setup must've sucked. Thank goodness you don't have to mess with the texsolv again! It *is* odd that they weren't more specific about how to position the loom on the table. Sounds like a case of instructions written by someone who'd been weaving so long that they forgot what it's like to be a beginner. Glimakra is a great brand, though - you'll get many years out of that loom, I'm sure.

I had another thought on the bag; simpler to sew. Make the long strap as I described before, but when assembling the bag, use it as the sides. In other words, the fabric of the bag body would form a deep, square-bottomed U-shape, and the strap would be attached a the bottom of the U, with the body sewn to the edges of the strap. That way you could let the fringe on the end of the strap hang down below the bag, if you wanted. You'd get a bag with a larger capacity and a shorter strap. Just an idea. *g*

Date: 2011-01-07 01:58 pm (UTC)
weaverbird: (Beading)
From: [personal profile] weaverbird
I share your peeve! "X is hard to do" is a self-fulfilling prophecy. I put off learning herringbone stitch for years because the instructions I read talked about how tricky it was. Once I tried it, I found that it was no such thing. So yeah.

~~~~~~~~~

That skein is Coopworth - a deliciously lustrous breed - and the batt of layered blue/purple was so gorgeous that I just HAD to have it. So I bought it - and a drop spindle - and was promptly hooked on spinning. *g*

~~~~~~

Oh, I'm sure Glimakra would appreciate feedback on the instructions! If I was in your shoes, I'd write the revisions/suggestions, and a cover letter, right away - letting out all the frustration of the experience while your memory of the details is sharp. And then (this is KEY), I'd put it aside for at least a month, until I'd calmed down and gained some perspective, at which point I'd edit the documents to make them a tad more diplomatic, if no less forceful. ;) I'd lead with some positive feedback about what you DO like, and perhaps a picture of your scarf, and then hit them with the suggestions. I wouldn't be surprised if you got a positive response; they'd be fools not to see the value in customer input.

Date: 2011-01-07 04:45 pm (UTC)
seryn: flowers (Default)
From: [personal profile] seryn
You're sure you didn't want to make your own post to the group so more people could see your spinning? Or something else?

Date: 2011-01-07 05:09 pm (UTC)
weaverbird: (Jewelry)
From: [personal profile] weaverbird
Oh, I plan to! Haven't decided yet what to post about. My focus is on beadwork these days so that's a candidate, but I've got a couple of weaving projects languishing on looms, so perhaps I could post about one of them in an attempt to get it rolling again. Must ponder...

Date: 2011-01-07 05:12 pm (UTC)
seryn: flowers (Default)
From: [personal profile] seryn
Any of those things sound really interesting, I can see why you'd find it hard to choose. (And I'm glad you took it as a friendly nudging.)

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