Wednesday 8 November 2017

Tiny driftwood weaving


I haven't been weaving very long but it's quite addictive. There are tons of good tutorials on the internet but I particularly like Weave With Pat and The Weaving Loom for their easy to follow guides and examples of the different techniques. 

I fell in love with The Weaving Loom's stick weaving tutorial and decided to give it a go. Visit her tutorial here for a much better example of how to do this, or read on for the half-arsed version. 

You will need:
A Y shaped stick (I used some driftwood). Make sure it's strong enough to withstand some tension.
Embroidery threads, wool, roving and whatever else you feel like weaving with.
A darning needle (the blunt with a big hole kind of needle).

Get yourself a good stick. This is not a good stick. It's very small and fiddly.
Tie some thread to the stick. This will be your warp (the vertical threads)

Wrap the thread around the upper stick (where you knotted it) and then bring it over the lower stick and wrap once.


The thread will cross in the middle. Repeat till you run out of stick.

Tie off the end. You want it to be tight but not super tight. Bouncy but not loose.

Thread a needle with contrasting embroidery floss. This will be your weft.

Bring the floss over the first warp and under the second.

Repeat until you reach the end.

Bring the thread around the last warp and repeat in the other direction.

This line of weft should be opposite to the one above (so under then over)

Use the needle to push the woven threads together. Add another line or two of weft.

Cut the thread leaving a tail a few inches long (You can weave it in later).

The picture isn't upside down. I started weaving upside down. It happens. Add a new line of warp. See here to learn how to do this stitch (it's called Soumak)

Push your lines of weft together and admire it at a jaunty angle.


Repeat the Soumak steps in the opposite direction. It looks like teeny arrows. :-D


Add some more rows of regular stitches. Like the first step. They probably have a name.

Add some wool roving. Regret this bitterly because it's too bloody fiddly in miniature.

Fill the rest of space with fat stitches because you've tired of the tiny weaving experiment.
Use the needle to weave the ends in to the back of the weaving. Do a better job than this hot mess.


Ta Da. Behold your tiny messy woven stick thing. 



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