Narrow Minded
Adventures in Narrow Wares
Monday, September 30, 2024
A band with a spiral motif (kivrim)
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
Monotonous Monochrome tablet weaving (the Thin Blue Band)
Well, it's done. Yay! By the end, I was very tired of it. I started with roughly 3 yards of warp and ended up with about 83" of band. I could have eked out another few inches, but Yet Another warp thread had frayed and broke, and I was tired of replacing them.
The band's width varies from about 7/8" to about 15/16", which is a bit more than I like to see. Hopefully some of that will go away when I block it. Ditto for the wavy lines which are a result of how I tensioned it and advanced the warp.
As I wrote in the previous post, this is the pattern seen in the Museum of London band 449 (according to Grace Crowfoot) and also in the pre-Roman El Cigarralejo pattern (according to Aisling). It consists of 4-threaded tablets that alternate orientations -- 3Z and then 3S (or vice versa). I used 30 tablets. My aim was to get it to be >1" but obviously that didn't happen. It's a nice looking band anyway.
I used my Robin & Russ Handweaver tablets since I didn't know how many tablets I'd thread up when I started. The thread is the same teal thin cotton 2-ply I've been using, as gifts for a friend. The combination of large tablets and thin loosely-plied yarn was not a great one. It was hard to turn the tablets and clear the shed, and eventually the thread started to fray and pill. My weaving area has a thin layer of blue lint and cotton-plus-cat-fur pills under where the band was being woven.
I think the R&R tablets are going to be retired unless I'm doing a project where I don't have enough tablets of a smaller size. Some are getting worn out, but the real reason is that I do truly prefer the smaller tablets. I probably have a few Linda Hendrickson tablets around that have extra holes for Andean pebble weave, but those are special purpose tablets that aren't going to be in general use. Plus I bought them to support one of the wonderful people who publicize and teach the various techniques of tablet-weaving.
I'm not sure what I'll do next. The Mammen 3/1 twill band is calling to me (Aisling's chart, probably). Or maybe I need to do more cords or the double-face Durham seal tag patterns. Or play with the little 3D-printed rigid heddle someone gave me. Or do more inkle weaving or backstrap weaving. Etc. I'm also gonna be doing a bit more spinning and knitting as the weather cools.
I might try to make more stuff from the teal and gold my friend supplied. We'll see. Right now I'm irritated at it, so it's all gonna be in timeout for a while.
I taught another class recently. I wasn't sure what to teach so I took my cue from the attendees. It ended up being twisted cords and the 4-strand Fill the Gap braid. They had fun and so did I.
Friday, August 30, 2024
More monochrome tablet weaving
Sunday, August 18, 2024
Another Antinoe band (two-hole diamond-and-dots)
This band is in the Louvre, here: https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010049695 and here: https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010046880
The label says that's it's from Antinoe (i.e. Coptic Egypt), estimated to be from sometime between 395 and 641 CE. There is no other info about it, I don't think.
The band and chart are in Aisling's new book on Tablet Woven Bands from Egypt. I had intended to maybe do the slightly larger Brooklyn-museum band that is nearby in the book, but when I saw this one, I was overcome by its charms and had to drop everything to make it my next project.
It is indeed extremely charming. I like it a lot, both sides of the band. The original was made from red wool and white/natural linen, with something slightly more greenish as the edge tablet. Mine is from the usual cheap big-box-store #10 cotton, in red, white, and sage green. The weft is a finer red cotton.
The original is apparently 2.2cm wide. Mine is 1.4cm wide (5/8"). Mind ended up about 67" long (roughly 167cm).
The photo is of the unblocked band, so some of the motifs are still a bit elongated from the weaving tension. It shows mostly the front but also the back of the band.
Two-hole is so much fun. I love the texture of it. The motifs in this band look like little polka-dots in a diamond mesh. I'm looking forward to making the Brooklyn band someday -- it's a little wider and the motifs are more like diamonds than polka-dots. But it too is seriously swoon-worthy in its cuteness. Both of these will probably stay in my repertoire since they're fairly quick and straightforward to weave.
I have no idea what I'll do next. As usual.