Then she proceeded to zap the silk gauze that I was working on right out of my hands. She also managed to take all of the spools of silk sewing thread that I was using. I have no idea where she hid them.
In their place was my smallest beading loom and lots of crewel wool.
I went on strike and refused to start weaving until this morning. After pouting for the rest of the evening, she finally stomped away, defeated. I won a round!
Well, I did until this morning. Then she let me have it with both barrels. "You will not do anything but weave today. I am not giving your bargello back until you finish at least one rug!"
In the early 80s I taught macrame and weaving in a couple of craft stores. I used a table loom quite often. For the classes, I taught people to make a cardboard loom and do a woven pocket or bag. It was fun to do. I haven't done much weaving since that time.
I finally gave my dusty table loom away....I just wasn't using it. Minis got in the way of larger crafts.
It all comes back when you need it though. I strung up the loom with regular sewing thread and started using various crewel wools for the weaving.
I did the starter band of weaving with tatting thread because it is a bit thicker than sewing thread. Then I switched to the crewel.
Tessie tried her hand at it, but she kept getting tangled in the thread and messing things up.
I finally shooed her away and took the needle back. I find that a long tatting needle works great for doing this on the beading loom. It reaches all the way across the loom and you don't have to stop in the middle of a row to pull the thread through.
I remembered why I am not that crazy about weaving, especially with fine thread....It is slow.
Here's what I had after a couple of hours. It goes about the same pace as mini needlepoint. I am out of practice.
It does take a bit of work to keep the edges straight.
I am determined to finish this piece this afternoon so that Tessie will give my bargello back....I guess I had better get back to work now.
Please don't forget to vote. You are hanging in there with me. I appreciate your going back, time after time. So far, so good....
Also, the response to the anniversary drawing has been fantastic! There are right around 100 people entered so far. I am going to have to sort a few out because they commented twice. It will all be straight before Tessie draws the lucky three.
I have to go weave a rug now.
See you tomorrow.
6 comments:
oops sorry- I commented twice so you can toss one of me away. :)
Tell Tessie her loom is perfect as it is - half done so she looks incredibly creative with such a project on the go. We did weaving at school and I can remember how slow it was especially for the knobbly hourglass shaped mats we finished with! Yours is a bit more inspirational.
Thanks for this post...you can do everything. The pillow will be beautiful!
I'm in the process of weaving rush grass for 1:12 tatami mats using cardboard for a loom and it's difficult work. Each mat will have a finished size of approx. 4"x2" and I'll need 7. I've gotten halfway through one and I'm already tired! Have a good weekend.
Dangit Casey! Why oh WHY do you and Tessie keep giving me ideas when I'm already swimming between a handful of projects with deadlines? I am more than bad enough on my own without you two "helping." ;-)
::must NOT go find the old bead loom::::must NOT go find the old bead loom::
Those little beading looms ARE perfect for mini weaving. Think of them as navajo looms, lying down on their backs.
I'm betting that pillow will be a knockout, btw.
Glad to see you are holding your own on the voting list! I'll keep voting for you!
I have always wanted to see how this can be done on a mini loom. Thank you for posting this, Casey.
Casey,
What a great idea! I bought mine 2 years ago and didn't know what to do with it, forgot about it, of course. I have to give it a try and weave a little rug too. Natalia
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