Friday, 29 June 2012
Second attempt with cottolin
Very careful warping is really worth doing, it's much easier to weave this time, though we still need to be careful that warp strands are all up or down, they still tend to stick to the reed.
Sunday, 3 June 2012
Weaving cottoline
Today we warped up the small (home made) loom with cottoline from Helen at http://www.myfineweavingyarn.co. I had been trying to find out the meaning of '8/2, 16/2 etc.' and Helen enlightened me. The larger number (8) is the number of 840 yard lengths spun from 1 lb of fibre, the smaller number is the ply. So 8/2 cotton is 16 x 840 yards, plyed as two strands and weighing 1 lb. 16/2 is 32 x 840 yards, plyed as two strands and also weighing 1lb, so therefore finer (half the width). Confusingly 8/2 can be written 2/8, and 16/2, 2/16. Also as linen has a different weight 22/2 cottolin is the same thickness as 8/2 cotton. There is a metric equivalent too. http://www.handweavers.co.uk/shop/cotton_linen.pdf
Warping with cottolin was time consuming, but the weaving progressed surprisingly quickly. I managed to snap a warp thread (memo to self: if the reed seems stuck do not use brute force), but carried on as I had 2 threads through each hole so just wove in the snapped warp. The finished result is smaller than intended (forgot to allow for how much is lost at the ends), but the pattern is pretty. The edges are a bit raggedy and there is the odd loose thread here and there. Next time I shall pay more attention to getting the tension even. The cotton shuttle was perfect for beating to get a fairly close weave.
The cottoline is sold under the Ashford label in NZ and the Louet label in the UShttp://www.camillavalleyfarm.com/knit/cotton.htm
Warping with cottolin was time consuming, but the weaving progressed surprisingly quickly. I managed to snap a warp thread (memo to self: if the reed seems stuck do not use brute force), but carried on as I had 2 threads through each hole so just wove in the snapped warp. The finished result is smaller than intended (forgot to allow for how much is lost at the ends), but the pattern is pretty. The edges are a bit raggedy and there is the odd loose thread here and there. Next time I shall pay more attention to getting the tension even. The cotton shuttle was perfect for beating to get a fairly close weave.
The cottoline is sold under the Ashford label in NZ and the Louet label in the UShttp://www.camillavalleyfarm.com/knit/cotton.htm
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