The tablet twisting techniques in a pdf contributed by Rasmus Twisttmann Jørgensen has been intriguing me for a while. I can't remember where I found it, but probably one of the Facebook tablet-weaving groups. It's called "Textured tabletwoven bands - A Viking Age technique from Gotland". He goes through some of the possible variations and offers a few samplers and other designs. He says that the guide is based on work by Lise Rædder Knudsen and Ulla Gerner Lund, so I specifically want to mention them, too.
I looked in Collingwood since he tends to be pretty comprehensive, and he mentions tablet twisting around the horizontal axis of the tablets to be a technique that changes colors (for non-monochrome bands), reverses the turning direction, and adds two quarter-turns of twist. Later in the book he talks about mixing quarter-turns and half-turns and other fun stuff, including for textural purposes, so I can see how tablet-twisting would give some interesting textural patterns.
So I warped up 13 cards (9 two-thread pattern cards and 2 four-thread edge cards per side) and started to play.
Alas, it's a failure. The guide does say that a tightly twisted thread is necessary to show the texture properly, and I guess that #10 Aunt Lydia's crochet cotton does not qualify.
Harumph. The textures are there but they are way too subtle to be worthwhile with this thread.
Oh, well. At least I got to try the technique and see how it works.
Jørgensen's charts use thread direction rather than tablet orientation. Also, his default turn direction is towards the weaver. He doesn't really give a threading chart but it's not like one is really needed. His pdf is very clear and his exercises and sample patterns are fun to work through.
I might try this again someday if/when I get some tightly twisted and probably thicker yarn. But this attempt is done. I'll pick out the weft and the warp will be repurposed for something else.
I learned from this sampler so it's not really a failure even if I'm a bit disappointed at it not being a rousing success. That's two tablet-weaving projects in a row. I guess that's what happens as I work through the list of things I want to try because I haven't done them before. It's all good new knowledge, both things to do and things to not do, and also learning a technique or thing I haven't done before.
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