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~ Jean Williams, Handweaver

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Tag Archives: Damask

Meet Junior

01 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by jeanweaves in Looms

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Damask, Loom, Weaving

Do you name your looms? Some years ago, I sold one of my looms to a weaving friend and later she referred to it by name. I didn’t know what she was talking about, until she asked “Don’t you name your looms? It’s how I keep them straight.”

I’ve never been one to name my looms – or cars, or any other tools.  I just called them by their brands—the Harrisville, the Baby Wolf, the Glimakra. But now I may have rethink that.

Junior in Pieces

Junior in Pieces

Meet “Junior”.

Junior is a 10-shaft Glimakra countermarche with drawloom. Junior hasn’t been assembled or woven on in over 20 years. This past weekend I picked up Junior from someone who used to weave lovely things before I even learned to weave, but who regrettably is unable to weave now. Junior has been moved several times by “moving guys” who didn’t know looms from lumber. Junior is dusty, tangled, and jumbled.

So I spent my weekend cleaning the pieces and puzzling over what goes where. Some pieces are missing. Some are of an earlier design than my current Glimakra and I have to figure out just how they go together. But the wood is starting to glow again.

Shafts, heddles, and ties

Shafts, heddles, and ties

Why “Junior”? Because this “new” old loom is slightly smaller than my first Glimakra, one I will now have to refer to as “Mama” because she came first. Junior is 47” wide compared to Mama which is 53” wide. Junior has 10 ground shafts; Mama has 12 ground shafts. Even though Junior is older, Mama has lived with me longer.

With some elbow grease and pondering, Junior will eventually look more like Mama. And then I won’t have to rethread every time I want to change weave structures!

What do you call your looms?

A Satin by Any Other Name…

25 Friday Sep 2015

Posted by jeanweaves in Damask, Satin, Terminology

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Damask, Satin, Textiles, Weaving

My apologies to William Shakespeare:

“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would still smell as sweet.”

Act II Scene II, Romeo and Juliet

What do you picture when you think of satin? Something smooth, with a sheen that reflects the candlelight? A fabric somewhat heavy but with a lovely drape? What is satin?

Red Damask on the loom

Red Damask on the loom

What do you think of when you hear “damask”? Do you see figured tablecloths on your grandmother’s holiday table? Do you see a dense fabric in a single color or an elaborate upholstery for the sofa?

In popular usage, satin is that shiny, slippery fabric commonly used in wedding gowns – and sometimes sheets, although I’m told that satin sheets don’t live up to their hype. Damask can be heavy suiting, upholstery, or table linens.

In weaving terminology, satin is “a weave with warp floats on one surface of the cloth and weft floats on the other.”  (van der Hoogt,  Madelyn, The Complete Book of Drafting for Handweavers. Coupeville, Washington: Shuttlecraft Books, Inc., 1993).

Snowflake Damask Runner

Snowflake Damask Runner

“Satins have one binding point only on each warp thread within the repeat.” (Cyrus, Ulla, Manual of Swedish Handweaving. Boston, Massachusetts: Charles T. Branford Company, 1956). Having only that single binding point produces long floats which reflect the light, thus giving satin its sheen. Using fine threads with more luster accentuates that characteristic of satin. Satin is closely related to twill but because those tie-down threads are scattered, there is no characteristic diagonal line.

Handwoven satin is not as fine as machine-produced satin, mainly because factory-produced cloth uses much finer threads than are available to handweavers. Nonetheless, handwoven satin produces a lovely fabric!

“Damask is a self-patterned weave which…is based on interchanging areas of warp and weft emphasis.” (Johansson, Lillemor, Damask and Opphämta. Stockholm, Sweden: LTs Förlag 1982). Satin is often used in weaving damask, but other weave structures can be used in one of the faces, satin with twill for example.

I’ve dabbled in weaving satin damask for many years and each time I thread the loom, I learn something else. This summer, I’ve learned a new way to weight my ground shafts so they come back to a neutral position (simple elastic straps). I’ve also played around with some floral motifs gleaned from early weaving manuscripts.

Red and White Dräll (as opposed to "damask"), front and back

Red and White Dräll (as opposed to “damask”), front and back

I feel like I have so much to learn about these structures. Case in point, in researching for this blog, I realized that I have been using the term “damask” exclusively when some of what I weave is more correctly classified as dräll weave which uses repeating blocks for patterning whereas “the patterning in damask is…freer and richer than the geometrical figures in dräll.” (Johansson).

I’d like to see how 8-shaft satin differs in look from 5-shaft satin. That experiment is yet to come. A friend also noted that a lot of early manuscripts show drafts that combine satin on one face with a different weave on the other face. Intriguing.  That too begs to be studied.

What do you think of when you hear “satin” and “damask”? Let me know.

Greetings from the Weaving Room!

09 Friday Aug 2013

Posted by jeanweaves in Table Runners, Towels, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Damask, Table Runners, Towels, Weaving

It’s another pleasant, late summer day in Missouri. The beans are slowing down and the tomatoes are trying to ripen before the squirrels get them. They are on their own. I’m working on a couple new warps!

Last week, I put the draw attachment back on my Glimakra loom and rethreaded a damask warp, this one in forest green to grace holiday tables. I’m using a star pattern from an early coverlet which repeats for the length. The beauty of this damask threading is that I can change patterns at will and get a variety of designs on one warp.

tumblr_inline_mr9nl1hHDc1qz4rgpThe other warp on my smaller loom is for hand towels. I combined a lemon yellow cotton with a daffodil cotton to make nice, thirsty towels. I just wish I had more of each color to use as weft as well, but alas, both cones are empty now. So it’s time to get creative in using what’s on the shelf: perhaps a soft spearmint green, perhaps a bold orange, maybe a paler butter yellow. We’ll see what works.

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