Skip to main content

Bag of skittles

So delicious and sugary. Sadly this warp was rather slack down the side. Rubbish.


Comments

BrutalisT eXile said…
Nice colours,

There is always loom weights.
Carrie said…
Hi Andrew
Looks like you've been busy lately :). Just wondering if you (or anyone you know - college etc) have any use for a knitting machine? I got one from a friend of a friend, but honestly it's not something I'm really going to use (or have space for). Still boxed and never been used. Let me know!
(Happy 30th btw!)
Carrie xx
Carrie said…
Hi Andrew
Looks like you've been busy lately :). Just wondering if you (or anyone you know - college etc) have any use for a knitting machine? I got one from a friend of a friend, but honestly it's not something I'm really going to use (or have space for). Still boxed and never been used. Let me know!
(Happy 30th btw!)
Carrie xx
Andrew Kieran said…
brutalist: yes, there is always loom weights, thanks for reminding me of that :)

Carrie: I'll see if i can get a look at it before christmas. It won't be any use to me, but i could sell it for you if you want, i'm sure someone will want it sooner or later down here. What make is it?

I'll see if I can get hold of your number and give you a call ( i know i'm always saying that) and thanks for reminding me of my age, it's sure been a while since we were running about in the car park on clyde street making itching powder out of rosehips
Carrie said…
Oh I still do that - it's not as much fun on my own though! :p

I'm not sure of the make (it's still in a box in the boot of my car, I haven't opened it yet). I'll have a look tomorrow and let you know :)
Carrie xx

Popular posts from this blog

Tablet Weaving Lesson #1: Backstrap weaving a simple diamond motif

This is the first in a series of video and photo tutorials showing basic to advanced tablet-weaving concepts. These lessons shall each build on the last and hopefully take the viewer from simple diamond patterns up to more complicated double face pattern weaving with finer yarns and eventually onto the heady heights of brocading and other fancy techniques (just as soon as I learn how to do them myself). In this first lesson we'll learn the basic weaving steps involved in weaving a diamond pattern in the backstrap style. This lesson is meant for someone who has purchased a ready-made warp from me. The next lesson shall detail how to design and make this warp oneself. And we begin This is the basic pattern we are making. The woven band is tied to my waist with another strap. I am holding a small stick shuttle in my right hand which contains the weft. In front of me are the cards, each card has 4 warp threads going through it. The gap that you can see is called the

treble-cloth construction

I am currently in the process of designing a triple layered fabric. One layer shall carry conductive warp threads (one out of every three), another layer shall carry conductive weft threads (again, one out of every three) and a third layer shall lay between them and act as an insulator, keeping them apart and preventing unwanted contact between the two conductive layers. Constructing a treble cloth is a compicated process. The way that a treble cloth is woven is that first the face cloth is woven, then the centre cloth is woven, then the back cloth is woven. This is a draft for a treble cloth. The crosses indicate weaving marks for the cloth currently being woven, the dashes are lifts and are used to indicate shafts that are being lifted in the case of layers that are above the layer currently being woven. Blue is back, Red is front, Green is centre (All three layers are plain weave btw) The cloth is constructed like so 1: Back cloth is woven. All red and green marks are lif

Building a jack loom Part 1: Vague plans and messy diagrams

I've been thinking about it for a while to be fair. What I'm thinking about is an 8 shaft folding jack loom. The interesting part comes when I point out that I'm going to build an electric dobby controller into the bottom of it so it operates from one pedal and a computer program. So far I've been thinking and thinking and I'm basically roughly copying the kind of frame you'd find in a Siever's school or Baby wolf loom. Basically it's like an X that folds up on itself with the castle in the middle. Should be able to reduce it's depth from 3 feet to about 1 for storage. I don't think it's really that difficult to design the loom frame, aside from building the beams and making the ratchets and so on, which I may just jigsaw out of thick MDF. I have most of the wood I need asides from some panelling and I need to buy some aluminium sheet to make the shaft dividers with and also to hold the shaft bodies together with. The rising levers w