Yesterday I finished the yellow weft and started on the blue/green weft.
I chose to weave plain weave for a number of reasons.
The yellow would blend more evenly with the warp colours and *appear* to be a bright green.
The epi on this warp was set for the thicker white weft I was trying to use up, which meant it was a little too 'sparse' for the 2/22 cottolin for anything else. OTOH, 20 epi was perfectly fine for the cottolin woven in plain weave.
Plain weave is a bit 'thinner' and since I wasn't sure how much fabric I would get out of the tube, I didn't want to weave the yarn to 'measure' with hems. Besides, my friend might like to make something other than towels with the cloth. Plain weave would be more versatile, I felt.
Since I have a couple of different tubes of cottolin, weaving them off in plain weave seemed like a prudent thing to do.
But, as I was weaving, I was thinking ahead to the next article and wondered if I could weave some samples with that singles 6 with high twist energy in it, and if it would do some 'interesting' things?
I've used it before and it has loads of twist energy in it - it was spun to be plyed, so all that twist is still in the yarn. It's just old enough it's gone 'quiet' but will re-awaken when it hits the water.
Hmm.
So I looked in my storage area, and sure enough I've got loads of the stuff. So instead of switching to the blue cottolin (only about 1/4 of a tube left), once I've done with the teal cottolin, I'll wind some of the singles 6 and weave some samples.
I don't know how much warp I will have left when I've done that, but I might be close to the end. Once I'm done weaving the samples, I'll take a gander at the warp beam and decide if I keep weaving or cut off and re-tie. There is still that hemp to be used up and it would work nicely on this warp.
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