I was in the mood for something new, and Sulawesi caught my interest.
What people refer to as Sulawesi tablet weaving is an interesting 3-color variant on double-face. People in that part of the world also do double-face tablet weaving, though I don't know if the people who do this also do the more typical 2-color double-face. Oh, probably, along with doing threaded-in plain weaving for borders and such.
With Sulawesi-style, tablets work in pairs. Two tablets always have the same orientation and turn the same (2 tablets that have / or \ orientation turn forward or backwards together twice. This means that one can chart it out using a single box to represent 2 tablets and 2 turns. Or not -- one can also chart out every single tablet and turn. Being able to use the box methods means that ideas can quickly be sketched out and charted out. (The same sketches can often be used for other tablet-weaving techniques, too.)
Also with Sulawesi-style, the colors have a particular pattern. There is a main motif color, a background color (or anti-motif), and an accompanying color. The accompanying color has two threads, one on each side of the others. (i.e. MABA). The tablets are oriented / / \ \ / / \ \ etc., i.e., alternating the orientation of each pair. The colors go up and down in little zigzags -- for the motif color, for example, it goes in hole C D D C C D D C etc., all across the band, while the background color goes in hole A B B A A B B A all across. Obviously this would easily lend itself to continuous warping techniques.
There's also some fun stuff the weavers there do with tubular edges and finishing the ends, but I'm mostly concerned with the basic tablet-weaving technique for now.
I have no idea how old this technique is. There's not a lot of info on old artifacts and ethnography only goes so far back and is limited in what it covers. I found a few 19th century artifacts online in the Yale University Art Gallery museum website but so far that's about it. I'll keep looking. The 19th century bands were often woven in cotton, by the way. And in addition to Sulawesi, terms like "mamasa" and "toraja" and "pallawa" turn up more links.
I also found a video, where the cards are flipped to change colors (rather than turning the other direction): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4GSQu7dD0U. It's not clear exactly what pattern the weaver is making in the video, but the band shown at the end is the same technique (though it looks like the background color is the same as the accompanying color and/or it's 3-threaded).
Sagawoolcraft.com is a blog and website with a lot of interesting Sulawesi-technique tablet weaving and charted motifs. So that's where I started. She charts slightly differently from how I do, but if I ignore her tablet labels and tablet set-up, it works out the same as with the Karisto/Pasanen charting conventions I prefer. She likes having A at the top of the warping chart going down to D at the bottom, with D closest to the weaver and A towards the unwoven warp. Karisto/Pasanen conventions have D at the top of the warping chart going down to A at the bottom, with A closest to the weaver and D closer to the unwoven warp. Both start the pattern weaving chart from the bottom and both number the tablets from left to right across the band.
I recharted it (using one of the online charting websites) to be sure. And then I made up some of my own motifs because it was fun and easy. So... I guess I'll be doing a mix of motifs from wherever I find them along with my own motifs.
There are examples online in other places on the Internet, of course.
Anyway... I decided on a small band for my first effort. It has 8 pairs of tablets (16 pattern tablets) with one extra tablet per edge (18 tablets total). The edge tablets are threaded in colors A A B B, in colors different from the main band, to help me keep straight the direction the double-face turning needs to go in. At this point, I prefer to turn cards forwards and backwards instead of flipping them, so of course that's what I did.
And..... it's fun! A little fiddly, but not horrible with so few pattern tablets, and it's pretty easy to see right away if you're doing it right. My very first motif has been woven (and it's one of my own designs -- nothing fancy but I did it myself), and it's lovely! I'm chuffed. I'll probably do mix-and-match motifs rather than the same one(s) all the way down the band. I do like a lot of the Saga Wool Craft motifs so why not add some of hers as well as my own designs?
These bands can be done with three or two threads per tablet, too. If 3-threaded, then omit the background (anti-motif) color. If 2-threaded, then omit the two accompanying threads.
I wasn't able to do any tablet-weaving for the last several weeks due to other obligations. I'm glad I can resume tablet-weaving and other fun stuff again.
I'm probably going to be teaching people how to do 4-loop fingerloop braiding (for the near-universal square/round cord) in a few weeks. I hope the class ends up being reasonably fun, easy, and useful. I could do other 4-loop fingerloop braids as well, or other methods for making the same braid structure, but I probably will keep it simple and focused on only this one topic. I'll probably show two ways to do it, though. Or at least present two ways even if one of them is mostly left as an exercise for the braider to do some other time. (I'll probably start with the Makusua maize blossom braid from L-MBRIC because it's easier for me to keep track of where I am in the braid.)
Now back to my band.... what motif shall I do next? How many more shall I make up? Do I care about pattern flow throughout the band or is this mostly a sampler of whatever I feel like doing next?