The weaving area is set up again, and it's time to weave!
I did a continuous warp of 17 tablets (plus 3 edge tablets per side for 23 tablets total) with two light and two dark threads. This is a great set-up for diagonals or double-face or twill.
My initial plan was to do the latest diagonals pattern posted on the Lautanauhat Facebook page. It's Merisalo 147. There's a version in Applesies and Fox Noses (21. Applesies in a grand sieve, p.66-67) that I've been eyeing for a while. And now these two new versions!
I warped up with dark blue and sage green cotton and got ready to party.
And I didn't like it.
First I tried the version with half-turns. Then the version without. They're both lovely patterns. But the weaving was just not fun.
Sigh. I didn't even bother with the version in Applesies.
Now what? I wanted to weave something!
Well, for a while, I've been thinking about something I read on Aisling's website. She wrote that after she first learned how to do 3/1 broken twill from a class with Ottfried Staudigel, she did bands that were simple and plain, no color patterning at all. I thought they were very handsome bands and wanted to make a few of my own.
So that's what I'm doing. I re-arranged the tablet orientations and thread positions and got started. Fun! This is clearly the right thing to be doing, since I keep returning to do "just one more" set of turns, over and over again. In general, for this type of weaving, I do a set of four turns at a time (i.e. one pattern repeat) and then consider if I am still able to focus or if I need to step away for a minute or two. If I lose focus, then I tend to spend the next little while unweaving.
I'm using Claudia Wollny's charting and weaving instructions since I might want to add motifs at some point. She has a bunch of motif charts in Tablets at Work and also in the two Lily Grove books. There's also the Arlon book, but those are all very wide motifs and I have a mere 17 pattern tablets to play with! The charts are all modular and work with her general charting scheme, very convenient.
I was reading back through Sarah Goslee's website and noticed her description of the two-pack method for doing twill. I've been doing the one-pack method so far. Maybe I'll try the two-pack method for a future band. Though that one would almost certainly be plain since I don't really like flipping or rotating cards around their axis; I usually prefer to switch the turning direction. This means I also need to read up on Peter Collingwood's discussion of twill.
It's been quite a few lovely inches of weaving, and I really am starting to think about adding motifs. The finished band will be around 1" wide 5 to 5.5 feet long, good dimensions for a belt. A few motifs would look quite nice, wouldn't they? Hmm, maybe do some color-switching, too, so that I have green motifs on a blue background as well as blue motifs on a green background. I'm sure I will keep things VERY simple and abstract-ish rather than doing animals. Twill is slow enough by itself (straightforward, but a trifle fiddly and thus slow) and I'm sure it'll only get slower if I am adding designs on top of the structure.
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I found some Lacis tablets at a local-ish spot. They have good reviews so I decided to try them. I think I like them. They are small (2.5") and white and plastic and come in packs of 25 cards. I've enjoyed working with smaller cards, so that was a plus. I wasn't sure if these were laminated cardboard or actual plastic. They are actual plastic, thin and somewhat flexible. I expect that they will eventually chip or crack.
The cards are labeled ABCD in a clockwise way, not that it matters. There's also a hole in the middle of the cards in addition to the ABCD holes. There aren't any colors or notches or anything else on the edges. If anyone cares.
My Robin & Russ tablets are getting kind of ratty-looking. They're cardboard and have woven many bands. It's kind of fun to see the wear. I have a lot more of them but I tend to use the ones I've already used, partly to watch this slow deterioration. I don't do a lot of really wide bands but I have plenty of these cards for when I do!
I must admit that I prefer smaller cards in general. My hands are relatively small, and also the smaller cards allow me to work in a smaller space since there's not as much room needed to turn the cards. That's especially true for eking out the last inch or two of weaving when the warp is almost done. The shed seems to be perfectly reasonably sized for the smaller tablets I've used, so I don't necessarily need a card that is over 3".
I hope someday to return to the Merisalo 147 band because it's gorgeous and because I usually do like doing diagonals patterns. But for now, it's gonna be twill! And then maybe some double-face if I don't return to my two-hole/two-thread obsession. Or maybe Saxon (i.e. pack-idling). Or Sulawesi. So many wonderful things; I am glad that modern tablet-weavers have done so much to resurrect these old techniques and old (and new!) patterns for today's weavers.
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