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Showing posts with label GCW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GCW. Show all posts

Saturday, February 11, 2023

A Life Well Lived


I got some sad news today 🥲

 


It is with regret that I must share the passing of Guild of Canadian Weavers Masterweaver Margaret Hahn on February 7th, 2023. She obtained her certificate in 1984, her thesis was on Opphampta. She also served as the GCW Test Mentor for many years.
I have posted her Obituary as published by her family below.
I was happy to call her a dear friend and weaving mentor and through her encouragement, had my feet firmly set on the weaving path, and my time and service in the GCW. Since I was a serving GCW president at the time of completeing my basic level, both Margaret Hahn as Mentor and Sandra Fearon as Test Administrator signed my certificate. The first and only so far I believe to not have a president’s signature. I’m fortunate to have some of her hand wovens and a couple of shuttles, but the best gift of all besides her encouragement, was her Megado loom which I use daily.
Margaret first came to weaving by using bed lap frames with her recovering patients in 1947 in her role as an occupational therapist. I met Margaret in 1995 as a new weaver and neighbour. She ‘inspected’ my first used loom and made sure of my posture and bench height to get me off to a good start right away. While I struggled with the learning curve, she picked up a shuttle and simply danced away on the treadles and it showed me what was possible! When I complained about my selvedges, she told me to ‘weave a mile’ and while it was said with a smile, she wasn’t joking. Of course she was right. I still recall her as mentor looking at an overshot tray cloth I had woven as part of my Basic level and she declared my circles as ovals and confiscated it and set it on her tea trolley and set a plant pot on it. She never did give it back!
Margaret inspired many weavers with her workshops and mentoring at both the local level or through her time mentoring with the Guild of Canadian Weavers. I know of several who started the testing program thanks to her encouragement.
After knowing her for many years I discovered that she wasn’t just Marg Hahn, friend and neighbour, but actually Baroness von Hahn. As you will see from her obituary, she lived a rich and full life outside of weaving.
The pictures of Margaret in a pink top are  from July 2012


This is her obituary and photo as placed by her family. Please click to enlarge to read.



🌹

The Ponderosa Guild of Kelowna, BC shard their memories of Margaret:

Margaret von Hahn

1928 - 2023

 

Marg Hahn, as the Ponderosa Guild knew her, died last week in Vernon BC. Marg joined us in the mid 1980's, after moving to Carr's Landing (Lake Country) from Winnipeg. Originally from Cornwall, England, she had completed her Occupational Therapist training at Oxford University, which included a vigorous weaving component.

 

Marg became an active Guild member, teaching various weaving classes, a term as President, and as newsletter Editor. All while completing her Master Weavers programme for the Guild of Canadian Weavers, with her 4th year thesis on Opphamta in 1994. John Low of Woolhouse Tools named his 'Margaret' draw loom after her.

 

She did take spinning and other classes, but preferred weaving. Dye classes at her house overlooking the lake was always great summer fun, as was attending ANWG conferences with her. Marg was always willing to share her knowledge with our members, in addition to test mentoring GCW members doing their Master Weavers programmes.

 

Marg was a wonderful weaver with great colour sense, excelling in silk tartan scarves and tartan blankets. Her Okanagan Tartan was accepted by the Lord Lyon of Scotland. Our Christmas sales certainly benefitted from her elegant work.

 

She stopped weaving about 2012, aged 84! When she moved from Lake Country to Armstrong in 2020, she very generously donated her many weaving books and magazines to the Guild.

 

We will continue to benefit from her legacy for years to come.

 

🌹

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Opal Stars and Waves

The last finished project for the year is now all done and photographed.  One loom is empty now (gasp!) and the other has a runner project about mid way.   Not to worry about the loom being naked as a warp is being wound and is half way completed.

I used to have new warps all wound and waiting ahead of time, but now seem to take more time considering the next project and being more choosy. 

All to the good I think. There's far too much rushing about nowadays.   Between Christmas preparations and making up for lost covid time.... I'm quite happy to take things at a slower pace. 


I'm very pleased with how this project turned out and I'll say that both scarves sold within hours of being listed on Etsy.   That was the fastest part as everything else was slow and measured (literally).   I used my Fiberworks (Mac version) and created a colour gradation using four 8/2 tencel solid colours: royal, grey blue, greyed teal and aquamarine. I had the program create it in quarters and then flipped the centre  so it reversed to the opposite side. The colours are very close so I had to create a second copy with bizarre colours so I could see the colour order better.  Old eyes and glasses that slip all the time can make for a miserable time of it.  I think I spend as much time planning and selecting yarns and colours as I do the actual physical weaving...

So the threads were wound one at a time according to the chart on my warping mill, cut and tied each end.  I actually enjoy the process and have nice music on. Its relaxing to me.  I also like to watch the colours shift and grow on the mill:


The draft is one I found on Pinterest, with no accreditation unfortunately.  If you know who designed this please leave a comment.   This draft creates the 'waves'.


I played around with some treadling variations and when the pattern is reversed, you get stars and long ovals:


That's the beauty, the fun of a weaving program is that you can try all these things out and see a great deal before you commit time and yarn.   You can see the back view, check how long your floats are etc.  There's also an almost infinite selection of colour! 🌈


So, its been too cold or even too sunny to get decent pictures out doors so I'm doing my best inside the house. This is the Opal stars and ovals scarf.   I used the 8/2 tencel colour adobe as weft. The scarf is 10 inches by 72 inches, with a 5 inch fringe.



Below you can see the shift in colours and it would seem that aquamarine (turquoise) is much like yellow, in that a little goes a long way! It does seem to boss the other colours around a bit.




Then there is the Opal wave scarf. A bit shorter at 62 inches by 10 inches wide, but very pretty! Again I used adobe for the weft. It just pulled all the other colours together nicely. Green or blue.






So I listed them just before dinner and when I woke the next morning they were sold.  They are on their way to Maryland! 

We are on the verge of yet another snow event which is to arrive late today or over night.  We have an Arctic cold front to boot, so we'll be staying close to home and keeping warm.     I have done some online shopping and have some dandelion yarn and also green tea yarn coming. Some silk fell into the cart at Treenway too.    Merry Christmas to me!  🎁

In time I plan to show you my new 3D printed lease stick holder for the Megado loom.   A weaver's husband in the States look at her set up and thought: "I can make something better" and he did! I'm looking forward to trying them out next warp.

I would like to take this time to thank my regular readers who patiently wait for me to write.  Wishing you all the joy of the Holidays, how ever you celebrate!

I will be writing my usual annual weaving year in review post on January 1st.  



Friday, May 20, 2022

Late in Coming

I would have to say that today was our first truly warm spring day. You know the kind of day where you can open the doors and windows and feel comfortable.   We have had a very late, rather cold, wet and blustery spring so far.  I'm not one for heat, but even I was saying "enough already".   Our gardens are about 2-3 weeks behind and the bees are only just making an appearance.   🌺 🐝 

Also making a late appearance is me....  I actually threw a shuttle today for the first time in  2 months and oh, my.... is my arm ever weak and the legs are downright pathetic.    Its going to take some time to build up my weaving muscles and tone up again.   Always at the back of my mind is the shoulder area that gave me grief and "will this go out on me again?"   Still don't know what caused it to begin with. 

I spent the time spinning on my Hansen e-spinner and plying up old full bobbins from my other Rose wheel.   I'm at ten skeins so far.   I've had time to think about my studio and situation and came to some decisions.   

  • I'm selling my large Leclerc Tissart tapestry loom.
  • I'm selling my Majacraft Rose spinning wheel.
  • I'm selling my Janome Pro 4DX serger
  • I'm selling my back issues of Complex Weavers magazines.
  • ......and basically downsizing to what I actually use and enjoy, and the rest is optional.
The big tapestry loom is upgraded but I never seem to find the time or motivation to make a start.  I'd rather have the real estate back and besides, I have my Mirrix Little Guy tapestry loom.

The Rose wheel was harder to part with  but after spending time with the Hansen and getting truly comfortable with it, the Rose can find a new home too.  My feet are very arthritic and so treadling is painful some days.   Circumstances change and you must adapt too.

The serger? well, my needs are simple and its a machine with more bells and whistles than I need. I have my old White serger and we are old frenemies that understand each other after all these years. 

I was also very busy with the Guild of Canadian Weavers testing program this April. I'm the test administrator and we had a number of tests submitted for marking by master weavers. I'm the go between markers and candidates.    Lots of emails, waiting for parcels to arrive,  and finally congratulating successful graduates and a bunch of record keeping to do.     Normally its a once a year busy job and occasional emails through the year but I have agreed to organize my records going back to 1947 and scan them for the GCW archives.  Its literally the whole of our 75 years and reason for being.    This will start in the fall and be done slowly as time permits. 

Other "better late than never" items are these two scarves. I was able to (slowly) twist fringes and eventually use the iron to smooth for presentation.


My personal favourite os this one.   Its 20/2 black silk warp, 28 epi and the weft is 8/2 bamboo in a neutral gold  beige.   One side is a tad bit darker... the other a bit lighter, but not by much. So nicely reversible.


Its a 9 shaft 9 treadle twill where there are three separate blocks of 3 shafts.  You can make any of them wide as you like when threading, or as big as you like when treadling. It creates an interwoven affect that is very reminiscent of pattern #246 in Strickler's  8 Shaft Book of Patterns.   I could see the possibilities for colour play and it would make great lap throws, baby blankets, runners....


I'm positive I found this draft at Handweaving.net but several attempts at finding it there again have failed. I was trying to get the number.   So I say clearly, it not my draft, and if you get the number for it, please let me know. 




The second scarf is all silk. The weft is 20/2 bombyx silk in natural.   I found its a bit slippery on the weft turns and so would do some thread diving. I eventually used a large blunt needle to ease them into place.  So a weft with some 'tooth' to it is recommended if you want to avoid this issue.


It was a bright, but high cloud sort of day when I took these pictures. I had given up waiting for spring and just did my best with the day.



The over all block size were smaller with all silk and I was tempted to add repeats to build it up, but I decided to go with the same and have a tighter pattern affect and I like it.   Good to try things out and see how it goes.  Call it a full sized sample  😉



So here's the draft.... see what you can come up with!
Have  great May long weekend!






Friday, June 4, 2021

Snip, Snip! ✂️

 


Do you recall the blue, green and mauve plaid in my last post?  The edge blue tencel threads kept on fraying and breaking every 1 to 3 inches and I finally had enough.  I cut off a 32 inch long woven piece.   I wasn't sure what to do next so I resleyed and tried it again for about 6 inches...... then cut the whole dang thing off the loom!  ✂️  😁     Oh, so liberating! 

It seems the blue tencel along the edges was much more loosely spun and or plied and so it became a problem.  No matter what adjustments I made, it was too soft to pass a reed to and fro.    So in the future, that royal blue will be weft only and I have marked the cone as 'weft only'. I also must check the twist and ply more carefully on any chosen yarn. Isn't it wonderful that after 25 years of weaving I still have new things to learn?   

I have another warp wound and beamed and only just started.... here's a sneak peek at what one repeat looks like....


More on this next time....

I have been playing with my new Hansen mini spinner and I just love it!  With the better weather, its been nice to sit out side and spin and admire the garden.     Now I'm going to shamelessly plug the fact that I have a Louet Victoria S95 fully loaded spinning wheel for sale. Contact me if you are interested.   Email is emmatrude at gmail dot com.   You can see it here



Another announcement. I became the Test Administrator for the Guild of Canadian Weavers.  It will be formally announced in their next issue of their Bulletin newsletter.   I will be assisting weavers who wish to take the tests.    What is it all about?   You can read up on the program, the test booklet (which anyone can download) and the annual submission times and requirements and costs.

That's it for now..... go and get vaccinated and then get outside!   💉    😁  🌞 ⛱..... be sure to keep a mask handy just in case.  



Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Overshot~ From the Past to the Present

 Grab a coffee or tea... this one is long!

When I say overshot, what comes to mind?

Is it old Colonial blankets, usually white background with blue, black or red wool pattern and large, large designs?  A corner box with the weaver's initials and a date.They bring to mind an image of early residents of colonial America and also the British Colonies, later to be called Upper and Lower Canada.

They were functional, practical and pretty.  They could also be made entirely in the colonies with materials to hand.  We use cotton for warp today but some early coverlets had a fine grist plied lynsey-woolsley for warp.
I'm not going to delve too deeply into the history of Colonial textiles here today but if this topic really intrigues you, then I recommend this book: The Age of Homespun: Objects and Stories in the Creation of an American Myth by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.



It mainly covers  the American colonies, but shows the importance of textile manufacturing to the colonists and the value of their tools and equipment. They were listed in household estate accounts as assets  No new bride could be married without her dowry of spinning wheel, loom, shuttles and such. These tools were passed down from one woman to another, but always listed as belonging to the husband or the master of the house.

It is thought that overshot was brought over from Europe with the early arrivals to the New Land. Settlers brought many ideas and tools with them and adapted them to the new life here.  With a colder climate and long winters, overshot blankets meant you had a thick stable cloth, woven on four shafts, that kept the sleeper warm and also served as a decorative bed covering.

If the topic of these historical coverlets interests you, then I recommend the amazing twenty five year study by Helene Bresse:  The Coverlet Book.   There is a good review of these two large volumes at the link.



I bought my (heavy) two book set some years ago and have enjoyed  reading through and will be for sometime!  The writing is like reading a conversation.  (Helene is also known for her other work: The Weavers Book.     Another classic!)

I have seen some stunning coverlets quietly doing their job in movies: "The Patriot" with Mel Gibson and Heath Ledger. I had to watch it again  and freeze frame the movie to get a good look! It was a natural setting for a colonial coverlet. The coverlet that was wrapped around Dakota Fanning in "War of the Worlds", featuring Tom Cruise was a pleasant surprise!  Are you one of those weavers who's eye scans movie scenes for textiles and gets excited when you spot something handwoven ?  

Lets get back to our weaving  with overshot and some of the basics with the four shaft variety.  I need to point out here that these are simple guidelines and by no means complete. Just a small primer to pique your interest. I will post reading / study material list at the end.  These notes are based on an overshot study I undertook some years ago. 

Most new weavers are introduced to overshot at an early newbie weaver stage and usually start with a draft from Marguerite Davison's classic: A Handweaver's Pattern Book. Its still available to purchase after all these years.   The drafts in this book are for sinking shaft looms such as counterbalance looms. You can flip the tie up for jack looms. If you don't, it means you will be weaving the pattern upside down, which isn't a problem but it would be nice to see the front as you weave. This little detail would make it confusing for new weavers starting on overshot for the first time, in addition to handling two shuttles!

Overshot is a twill derivative using two threads to create a unit block. This means you can have four blocks on four shafts. One thread in each block, is shared by the next block. This one thread in common creates half units in between blocks of either all pattern or all tabby. (This can be expanded through to eight shafts but we'll stick with four shafts for this post) See what I mean by this in the picture below:


Block A is threaded on shafts 1 and 2.
Block B is threaded on shafts 2 and 3
Block C is threaded on shafts 3 and 4
Block D is threaded on shafts 4 and 1

Overshot is actually two pieces of cloth, being woven simultaneously; one is a tabby or plain weave cloth,  the second is the pattern that 'over-shoots' the plain weave. You throw one shuttle for the plain weave and a second shuttle for the pattern weft, beating *very* firmly between each shot. If you were to take away the pattern weft, you would find a perfectly balanced 50/50 plain weave cloth. The pattern weft should compact well but be 'lofty'  to cover and produce blocks of solid colour with no plain weave peeking through. Normally the pattern weft is twice the size of the tabby yarn. Traditionally, cotton for tabby and  with wool for pattern. 

 If the pattern weft is beaten properly into place, the circles are true circles (no ovals), twill lines are a true 45 degrees, and if there are three blocks of the same unit in the threading then it should make a square little box when three repeats of the treadling are complete (which equals 3 shots of tabby and thee shots of pattern weft, so beat well!)

I keep the 'odd' tabbies of treadles one and three to enter from the left hand side, and the 'even' tabbies of treadles two and four from the right hand side. Also I work with both shuttles, tabby and weft, on one side of the warp. If you end up with  divided shuttles then you have a treadling error to find!. The shuttles can be awkward to coordinate at first but you soon develop a rhythm. Be aware that many overshot drafts may say "use tabby" but don't show it in the treadling.  Then there are some that don't mention the tabby at all. They are assuming you know to insert it.

The tie up is a normal twill tie up { 1,2  2,3  3, 4 and 4, 1}    Tabby treadles being  1, 3 and 2,4.  You are working with six treadles.  You can tie up the tabbies on the far left and far right, or side by side at the end of the run. What ever works best for you. I placed broccoli rubber bands on the two tabby treadles so my bare or socked foot could feel which one I was using. One band for tabby A and two bands for tabby B. 

The majority of overshot is woven "as drawn in" which means you repeat the exact threading as your treadling. Old drafts say "tromp as writ" which is the same thing. 

Twill fashion is where you treadle a block over again to produce exact squares. This may be more repeats than is in the threading. You can also follow twill treadlings such as: rosepath ( 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 4, 3, 2, 1), point twill (1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1) , or broken twill (1, 2, 4, 3).  Its then called overshot treadled as rosepath, or treadled as summer and winter. There are many other ways to vary the treadling and these all make very pretty borders! The following examples are from my first level of the Guild of Canadian Weavers Test. I took portions of the treadling and created these border patterns. They had to have a purpose for being woven. Click to enlarge...

Embroidery floss ~  ladies pillow case border

Embroidery floss ~ flowers for a baby bib

Woven on "opposites" with no tabby ~  border on woman's apron

Chenille border on Christmas runner
Top: tapestry wool ~ border on woven sweater material. Bottom:   embroidery floss ~ border on table runner 
embroidery floss~ border on kitchen towel
Embroidery floss in six shades of blue ~border on kitchen valance curtain

You can also treadle "on opposites" which means you would use treadles 1, 2 versus  treadles 3, 4   or  2,3 versus 4,1.  There are no tabby shots in between. When you try it, what you get looks like this:

front view

back view

This sample is 8/2 cotton with equivalent 8/2 orlec woven in blocks of 'on opposite' treadling and no tabby. There is a border sample above woven on opposites you can go back and look at again.... I'll wait  :)

Then there is overshot woven Italian fashion:

front view

back view

This is where three colours are woven in given changing rotation of blocks, with no tabby again. It is similar to flame point where four or more colours are used in rotation.

There are six traditional pattern styles for traditional overshot:
  • Cross (A, B, C, D, C, B, A  Woven as drawn in, in either ascending/ descending order)
  • Diamond ( Threaded the same as Cross but the block is ascending / descending order: D, C,B, A, B, C, D   Start with center block)
  • Table (any two adjacent blocks, 5 units +/- woven to square, or,  drafted to be on opposites. See Davison pages 161,169, and 179
  • Wheel or Circles (blocks from basic motifs graduate in size from large to small to make circular patterns. See page 168 in Davison's book)
  • Star fashion (A, B, A, B,A   Treadles as threaded to produce an open pattern with diagonals and diagonal blocks more prominent.)
  • Rose fashion (threaded the same as Star but treadled differently. The treadling order is inverted to B, A, B, A, B. You substitute  blocks such as where there is an A, you use B, and where there is a C, you use a D. The results look rounded.)
Star and Rose fashion are mirror opposites!


Star fashion on "King's Flower" threading ~ front of sample. You can see the star pattern,  as well as the circles, diagonal twill line and squares


This is the back view. Note the small half unit blocks shown here. That's those shared threads between units.


Then there is Rose Fashion. See how the pattern is reversed and forms a flower in the center? Yea, its hard to see as I used a boucle yarn. Lesson learned?  Use smooth yarns for pattern weft!


Back view again with half units and you can see the reverse of the roses better here. It also looks like I was beating hard as my circles are now squares!


When designing overshot patterns you can place many identical units together and then continue through to other blocks but the turning point block in your design will have an uneven number of threads. When treadling, the turning blocks are treadled one extra repeat.


In the picture above you can see a sequence of blocks:  A, A, A, B, B, C, D, C, B, B, A, A, A. 
The D block has three threads with 4, 1, 4.

So besides bed coverlets, what else can you make with overshot? I have seen beautiful modern looking table runners, scarves,  overshot style borders on placemats and towels. I saw a beautiful (apparently) plain weave table cloth that had inlaid overshot motifs scattered like stars!  They looked like snowflakes on the royal blue cloth.   

I always thought it would be a neat challenge to weave overshot and have it look totally modern and comfortable in today's home. ( Its on my "to-do" list..) 

Here's my submission for the GCW test, level one. The pattern is called Honeysuckle (also known as Pine Bloom)


I used 10/2 mercerized cotton for my warp and 6/2 wool for my pattern weft for this four shaft tray cloth.


Let your eye wander and see the circles, the 45 degree angles and the squared squares in the centers.


Left is the top view, and on the right the back view with even clearer diagonal lines.


Here's the finishing: hemstitching, then rows of diagonal knotting.

By the way, all the overshot border samples shown previously were all woven on the same Honeysuckle threading. Very versatile weave structure!

So if you have followed me through to this point and are now thinking it might be nice to try some overshot study yourself. Perhaps try inventing some borders for towels? Here are a few books on overshot that are on my library shelf:

  • Weaving Overshot Redesigning the Tradition by Donna Lee Sullivan (ISBN 1-883010-23-3)
  • Creative Overshot by Margaret B. Windeknecht   Shuttle Craft Guild Monograph 31   (ISBN 0-916658-34-1)
  • The Complete Book of Drafting for Handweavers by Madelyn van der Hoogt, Chapter 4 (ISBN  0-916658-51-1)
  • Key to Weaving by Mary E. Black, 1982 edition
  • The Best of Weaver's ~ Overshot is Hot edited by Madelyn van der Hoogt (ISBN 10 1-933064-11-0

This post should give you much to chew on for a bit....next post will be a tad bit late but I will have lots to share when I do!