Doubleweave · Multilayer Weaving · Weaving

Ruffles

Some photos of samples I’ve been working on, I’m part of the Complex Weavers Dimensional Texture study group and our topic of study this year is Layer Interchange.

My first warp was 2 layers 10/2 cotton and 2 layers of R110/2 Tex corriedale. The wool layers are the only layers that interchange. The weft yarns were the same as the warp, and I also tried the cotton as a weft yarn on the wool layers to reduce the weft-wise shrinkage of those layers.I washed the samples in hot soapy water with agitation to cause shrinkage in the wool layers. After finishing the first sample I removed some warp threads from the left hand side, effectively moving the wool warp threads off centre

I wound a second warp using 20/2 cotton instead of 10/2.

Now I just need to decide on the final design and weave my samples to send to the other members of the study group.

Doubleweave · Multilayer Weaving · Weaving

3 December 2024

Doubleweave · Multilayer Weaving · Weaving

Vessels

So when I put on my first warp to further explore what I had been doing at the workshop with Stacey Harvey-Brown I decided to try make some more vessels but this time using 4 warp layers to weave a double layer tube, with the inner tube having a wool warp and the outer tube a cotton warp. The wefts were a mixture of cotton, paper, and wool. Once off the loom I gathered the bottom of the tube and then wet finished it by hand in hot soapy water until I was happy with the results. The shapes and textures of the vessels are caused by the differential shrinkage between the inner and outer tubes, different weft yarns and when and how the inner and outer layers are connected,. I particularly liked the effect the paper yarn produced when used in the weft, you can see that in the upper edges of the vessels.

Doubleweave · Multilayer Weaving · Weaving

A Weaving Workshop in France

The Loom Room is a purpose-built studio integrated into a renovated barn, attached to La Tuilerie, a ‘maison de maitre’ which is Stacey and her husband Graham’s house and where we stayed. There were 2 other weaving students staying for the week and we were each had our own weaving programme tailored to what we wanted to learn. While I was off weaving, Dale explored the neighbouring countryside on foot and just generally relaxed.

We were all staying on site, which meant we shared meals together. Graham cooked us delicious lunches and dinners, and Stacey went into town each morning to get fresh bread and pastries for our breakfast. We also were treated to local wines with our meals and Graham’s own beer from his micro-brewery. When we weren’t weaving Stacey showed us around the neighbouring area including a woad-dyeing business, the Saturday market at Nérac, a couple of bastides (fortified towns), some amazing churches, local artists and several meals out.

But back to the weaving, I was interested in learning about sculptural weaving so Stacey had a 8-shaft table loom ready for me warped up with 4 layers, 2 cotton and 2 wool. My samples didn’t look too exciting on the loom as they were flat plain weave layers. I explored swapping layers, weaving tubes, using different yarns including paper and linen and lastly removing some of the edge warp threads from the woollen layers. The magic all happened on our last weaving day when I took the samples off the loom and wet finished them, with all sorts of ruffling, gathering and shrinking going on. We also discovered during finishing one of the wool layers was probably machine-washable as it didn’t shrink as expected but that just added even more interest to the results . It was so exciting seeing my transformed samples.

I had such an amazing time at this workshop, Stacey is such an enthusiastic and inspiring teacher. Since returning home I have been continuing to explore the techniques that I learnt and having fun seeing what I can create.