Note the nice and tidy 24 one inch bouts across the lease sticks. More on this soon. Now here's the finished view from the front with the front breast beam off for access
I'm using an Ashford spinners chair as it's sufficiently low enough. The treadles don't part to slip the feet in though so I had to sit farther back.
Here's the warp roll and my floating selvedges in place. I couldn't quite get that paper on straight! Next time perhaps. It took 2 full rolls of best post office brown wrap, but I think it could be thicker. Tugging downwards on the paper needs thicker stuff.
Now I tied up the treadles, put on the breast beam and tied on the warp! Last detail is the new floating breast beam adjustment.
Here you can see the front legs are out of alignment due to the tension on the warp. I must go down and shorten the texsolv cord attached to the front legs on both sides. This means when I set the tension, all I must do when I advance the warp is to use the front lever to 'pull' the legs back into position and my tension is exactly where it was before the warp was moved. I'm new to this system and will be learning as I go! But here's a closer look at the adjustments:
Before....then tighten....
So back to those 24 bouts.... When I wound the warp I was thinking "24 epi" and so when I counted 24 of my colourful stripes, I thought I was done. I had my 24 inch wide warp ready to go. Well, imagine my surprise when it didn't work that way at the loom when I was sleying. My colour repeat was based on an 18 thread repeat, not 24. Oops. A big 6 inch oops.....
So right now I'm trying 20 epi so it's 21.6 inches in the reed. A bit open I know but my last false damask towels are sett at 20 epi and work, so??? Worse case scenario, I'll resley to 22 epi and try that. But if these towels are narrower, then they'll also be shorter in length. I might get another towel off as a result! Trying to make lemonade here!
Also life intrudes on the weaving time. Between dental appointments and a shaggy, over heating 'indoor' dog, I had to stop my loom set up to settle these other details! Here's one job done:
Before: ( he knows what's coming! That table only comes out for one reason!)
And after (which couldn't come soon enough for either him or me):Have you ever seen such a pathetic face? We're still not on speaking terms yet.
Susan:
ReplyDeleteI love your loom!!! You will have to let me know if you are happy with it.
It's great hearing I'm not the only "math challenged" weaver. Narrow warp equals shorter towels works for me too. Blogger may not shower the colorw very well but they look good on my computer.
Your puppy is a cutie in both pictures!! Hope you two are on speaking terms.
I second bspinner on the math challenge. A lovely loom. The tensioning system looks really neat. When I was taking workshops using guild looms, I would always sweat out the brown paper. I really hated it. Packing sticks, to me, seem so much easier. And you don't have to put them in every round. I usually put them in every third round.
ReplyDeleteI normally use sticks and have a storage bin *full* of them. I may in time try them again. But fow now, I will work with the paper and the warping method on the CD. I want to get consistently tensioned warps. My plans count on it as I'm about to start working again on my test levels and good results come from a good warp!
ReplyDeleteThere is a very different feel between the two looms here. Not bad, just different and I'm sure that I will adjust quickly!
Susan
Susan, great photos as usual, I love reading your posts....
ReplyDelete