I had to take this photo at an angle in order to show up the motif. White on white is very difficult to photograph, but I think this turned out ok.
This is the same threading I used for the last warp (tea towels with the highly energized/twisted weft) and I thought it was quite pretty and wanted to show it off.
In the theme of KISS, it is a fairly simple progression to thread, and of course, the dobby makes it easy to weave. When the loom is behaving. I had some issues on the last warp with one shaft not behaving properly, but I'm hoping that is fixed now.
The selvedges aren't 'perfect' but much of the problem will be disguised during wet finishing. And the beat is not 'perfect' as mentioned yesterday. But I don't much care. It feels 'right' for a nice dressy scarf as it is, so the diamonds are not perfect - and I find I don't care. The beat is consistent, and if you can't be perfect...
I'm hoping that the hard press during wet finishing will bring up the shine of the silk compared to the mat of the cashmere. The effect is subtle and that's fine, too. Not everything has to be eye catching.
And that's the thing when you weave your own textiles, especially if you design them yourself. You get to choose.
I find myself constantly intrigued by the various parameters involved in those choices, finding a path through the effect of one choice on the others.
Not everyone wants to follow a 'plan' however. And that's also fine. Because we are not bound to follow rules - we can ignore them when it suits us.
But our choices come with consequences. And if you are okay with those consequences you can make whatever choices you want.
My goal, first and foremost, has always to make cloth that will serve a purpose. So every choice I make I keep the end result in mind and try to be aware of how my choices will play off of each other and affect the finished textile.
As such, I have - over the decades (lordy, lordy, I feel *old* when I say that, but I have been weaving for a very long time) tried various things, woven countless samples, built a foundation of knowledge.
But the life so short, the craft so long to learn.

No comments:
Post a Comment