Narrow Minded
Adventures in Narrow Wares
Friday, August 29, 2025
Some idle thoughts
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Rib weave tablet woven band from Maksu, Humikkala (a 2-hole pattern from Tablet-Woven Treasures)
This one has appealed to me for a while. I'm not sure why I decided to do it now, but that's fine. It was a pretty straightforward project.
The band is in Tablet Woven Treasures by Maikki Karisto and Mervi Pasanen. It's on p.131, 15. Maksu, Humikkala (KM 8656:H30:1). They call it a rib-weave pattern. It's a two-threaded pattern with all the threads in holes A and C, not offset like a lot of other 2-hole patterns. There are 7 pattern tablets. Each side has 3 four-threaded edge tablets which are tubular-woven. (In other words, both sides have tubular edges and all 3 edge cards on each side are part of the tubular edge.) That makes 13 tablets total, 6 edge and 7 pattern tablets.
It's pretty adorable! Unblocked, it's about 7/16" wide and about 65" long.
A warp thread snapped in the middle, yikes! I have no idea whether to blame the cats, the thread quality, or happenstance. I'm glad I already have experience with this, and indeed, it was not an issue to attach a new warp thread and keep going. There's one spot where apparently I forgot to do the tubular edge on one of the sides. I tried to fix that, too, a bit less successfully. It looks fine on the top but is slightly visible on the bottom if one knows it's there and looks at the right spot. Or if one runs fingers along the band -- the repair spot feels a bit different, but that's also true of the unrepaired area before I tried to fix it.
The width varies slightly. I really wanted the red on the edge tablet to show. But I had to balance that against pulling the weft tight enough for the pattern to look right. I'm a trifle disappointed that the red edge is not too visible most of the time. Oh, well, it can be a secret, I guess. Or I can use this as a strap since both sides of the band are very cute. Or attach it at the very edge of something and/or attach it loosely so the red can be glimpsed.
I'm glad I did this band, but I think I'm tired of tubular edges for a while.
I have no idea what I'll do next. Something, I'm sure!
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Brocade Sampler, 8th and maybe the last post -- it's finished!
Done!
Here are the last few in-progress pics:
The top photo is a 13-tablet pattern taken from Ecclesiastical Pomp & Aristocratic Circumstances, p.120. It's the border from band "2. Band on the chasuble attributed to St. Wolfgang, Bishop of Regensburg, 11th/12th century". I did two repeats.
The middle photo has two motifs. The one on the left is a 9-tablet pattern from the Saxon Rabbit handout, from Grave 44 mid 6th century, Lyminge, Kent, pattern 10 in the Crowfoot paper. I did 4 pattern repeats. The longer one on the right is a 13-tablet pattern from Anna Neuper's Modelbuch, No. 76 (fol 79v), p.56. I did 4 pattern repeats.
I ran out of background weft at this point. The new stuff is the same color but maybe a bit thicker and softer. It doesn't matter.
The bottom photo has the last two motifs. The motif on the left is a 9-tablet pattern from Roslein und Wecklein, #214, p.179. I did 2 repeats. (Hmm, it would look nice with a pearl or pretty bead in the spot between motifs.) The motif on the right, the last one, is a 13-tablet pattern, a motif adapted from EC&AC, p. 134, pattern "17. Bands on a pontifical skull cap, 11th/12th century". I did the little diamond motif on the upper left part of the chart, 2 diamonds and then one more row to close up the upper diamond.
I maybe could have gotten one more small motif in, but I decided that was enough, and so endeth my first brocade sampler band.
Fresh off the tablets, unblocked, the band is about 5/8" wide and about 63" long.
There are 25 different motifs. Wow. I didn't even get to all of the charts I'd printed out, and also didn't end up making up more of my own patterns.
Many of the motifs look better in person. The brocade weft is shiny enough that it affects how the pics look. Not surprisingly, the later motifs tend to look better than the earlier ones I did.
I'm still working on consistency though I'm getting better. Adding a brocade border stripe, as many of the historic patterns did, probably helps with that since then the slight angle difference at the turning points will be in the edge stripe rather than in the main motif.
I really like the interplay of positive and negative space -- both the brocade and the tiedowns (in the background warp) make interesting patterns.
I'm pretty sure I managed to not accidentally weave any swastikas.
Brocade is pretty easy as tablet-weaving techniques go, at least for the basics, and really about the same, time-wise, as other fiddly tablet-weaving techniques.
I'll definitely do brocade again! It'll be interesting to do it with silk and/or metallic threads, similar to the materials used for many of the historic bands.
Now to decide what project I feel like doing next. So many possibilities but nothing is screaming at me. So I'll do some thinking and browsing of books and websites and what-not to see what appeals.
Monday, July 14, 2025
Brocade sampler, 7th post (and still going....)
Another three samples in my brocade sampler are in this pic.
The left one is a 13-tablet pattern from Roslein und Wecklein, #169 on p.151. I did 4 pattern repeats. The middle one is a 13-tablet pattern from Anna Neuper's Modelbuch, pattern No. 74 (fol 78v), p,54. I did 3 pattern repeats. Since the left is 12 rows long and the middle 16, each one is 48 rows long.
The one on the right is a 13-tablet motif from Roslein und Wecklein, #164 on p.147. I did one repeat because I didn't feel like doing two. I assume this little motif is a standalone star rather than a repeating motif. And of course I could have added pearls!
I like all of these. I'm also able to unweave fairly quickly when I notice a problem, assuming the problem isn't so far back that I prefer to ignore it. I feel fairly comfortable doing brocade, so this band achieved its hoped-for purpose. I can add brocade to the list of techniques I have experience with. I'll do it again, for sure.
What next for this sampler? Possibly a few more 13-tablet patterns from R+W and ANM. Maybe another coptic. Maybe some free-association stuff, or another Birka (if there are others that fit into my band's number of tablets). I'm also going to see if anything from Ecclesiastical Pomp is narrow enough.
I probably won't bother switching brocade thread since I still have plenty of this stuff left. But you never know. And if nothing else appeals, I can plain-weave until the end, or play around with texture patterns on the monochrome warp
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Thursday, July 10, 2025
Brocade sampler, sixth post
Wow, I'm really spamming my own blog with every little bit of progress on this sampler brocade band!
This is the brocade motif from the 10th-century Chernigov, Ukraine band. I used the chart from Aisling's website. Here is where she discusses it (with a link to the chart): https://aisling.biz/index.php/galerie/historisch/fruehmittelalter/262-chernigov-ukraine and here is the chart: https://aisling.biz/images/brettchenweben/Anleitung/Chernigov.pdf
This is a fairly popular band -- I found a good half-dozen or so examples of it that people have woven. What is interesting to me is that most of the ones other people have done use a thinner brocade weft that lies flatter, so that the background-warp tiedowns are more prominent and noticeable.
Hmmm. That is something to ponder for future bands. I know that the interaction of background warp and brocade weft threads are one of the issues people deal with when weaving brocade. I might not be doing those kinds of experiments with this sampler band since I don't have thin metallic thread lying around. But I wanted to note this specifically so that I am reminded on future tablet-woven brocade projects.
The ones I see online also have the extra strip of brocade as part of the edge pattern (19 tablets total rather than the 11 needed for the center motif). I have no idea if or how that affects things.
There are three repeats above, each 26 rows, and it's an 11-tablet pattern. I messed up a bit on the first repeat, oops, but it's not too noticeable. It's a cute pattern. I like it, though I do prefer other people's versions, where the background tiedowns really stand out against the gold and silver bling.
This was another chart where the tick marks referred to the tiedown and blanks were brocaded squares. This means I'll be confused for a few rows on the next motif if it's charted in the opposite way! But again, it's interesting to think about positive vs negative space and how brocading can emphasize either the pattern of the brocade weft or the pattern of the background-warp tiedowns.
I'm probably more than half down with my sampler band. It's not going to be particularly long or anything. Most of these little snippets of motifs are a mere few inches long. I believe all of them are fewer than 100 row, each with 2-4 rows of plain tablet-weaving between them.
Dunno if I'll do any more brocading today. If not, then there will be another post after the next few motifs are done! (or if there's something I particularly want to mention, as I did today)