Woven Goods
/It's the season for selling when you're in the business of making. Now I seem to spend extra time taking photos and then trying to keep track if the items are at The Artery or here, listed on the my website or on the Fibershed Marketplace site . Ideally there were would be three batches--some at the Artery and not on the website, some here and just on my website, and some here and just on the Fibershed site. The goal would be to have everything sold by Christmas and to not double-sell anything...but those lines are crossing. I have to be vigilante. Here are a few examples of what I've been weaving.
Chenille scarf using clasped weft.
Local yarns dyed with coreopsis and dahlia flowers.
More local yarns dyed with mushroom and black walnut.
This is the stack of ponchos that I finished in early November just before the Fibershed Wool Symposium.
This is how the loom looks from where I sit.
The rainbow colors are a result of a prism that hangs in the window behind me. After my mom died a friend gave me the prism and said that it was to remind me of my mom. And it does, as it reminds me of the friend, Sylvia.
Coreopsis dyed yarn.
The computer that holds the "brains" of the loom. This loom does not weave without me doing everything (for those people who think that having a computer hooked up means I'm not really weaving). It only keeps track of the pattern that I have put in.
This is what that pattern looks like. It will be completely different after fulling.
A look down through the warp threads to the cloth below.
OOPS! I think I have this in an earlier photo and I haven't told the story yet of what I did about it. That will still come.
Some of the finished ponchos.

Talk about a versatile garment. I have grown to love the poncho. It's really just a blanket with a hole in the middle for your head. Whether you're at the computer late at night (gee, does that ever happen?), in the car, or trying to stay warm while reading in bed it's an easy garment to throw on. And it also makes you look young and pretty! Just look at those photos! (Disclaimer--that's really not me.)



I didn't list this one because right now I can't find it. That may mean it is at the Artery. Or did I sell it? This is what I mean be trying to keep track. I'm not doing very well with that.
My niece was nice enough to model for me at Thanksgiving.
Photobombing brother.
These are yarns from Lunatic Fringe and all appear in the latest scarf I wove. Hopefully I'll get to that blog before too long.
This is my latest warp. I wound 13 yards of mixed
The other thing to notice about this photo is that the last piece woven on it is so much narrower than the others. This was the fourth shawl on the warp. The one before this one is a different weave structure (advancing twill treadling), but the first two are the same structure as the fourth one. The only difference is the weft yarn. The first three shawls were woven with 2015 Timm Ranch yarn on cones. The weft for the fourth shawl is 2016 Timm Ranch yarn that has been dyed. This is a perfect example of the difference that "finishing" yarn can make.
This is one of the previous batch of shawls. It is mostly Jacob yarn but the weft is last year's Timm Ranch/Jacob blend used from a cone without washing. In this case the width of the warp in the reed was 30" with a sett of 6 epi. That is very open but when wet finished the shawl is lightweight and has great drape. However, the finished width is only about 20" (33% draw-in and shrinkage). So I sett the brown warp the same at 6 epi but started with a 39" wide warp.
Here are the shawls from the brown warp after wet finishing. That one that was so much narrower on the cloth beam? That is the one that is a little wider here. It is now 27" wide (30% draw-in and shrinkage). The shawl in the same pattern but woven with the white weft is 26" wide (33% draw-in and shrinkage). The difference between width in the reed and the finished piece isn't much, but the photos show the dramatic difference in how the yarn behaves while it is woven.
Here is a before and after photo. The bottom shawl has been wet finished. The top one is the same weft yarn and same pattern, but has not been washed. Look at the very first photo in this post. You can see how wide open the yarns are. Off the loom they are a little closer, but that looks nothing like it will when finished.
An example of trying to take product photos with the help of a Border Collie.
Here is one of the final product photos. I noticed a surprise. I started to see a purple cast to one of the warp yarns. At first I thought that I just hadn't noticed that shade inside while I was weaving. I tried to convince myself that it was still brown.
Do you see it here?
Another photo of one not washed (no purple) and one washed. I lined up the same warp threads in these two pieces.
Depending on the light setting in the photo (and maybe your monitor) you may see it more clearly in one of these other photos.
In person it is clearly visible, although it doesn't stand out.