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Putting the Heddles to the Mettle

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20100205_RainbowWarp.jpg
Once you have your warp all ready to go, it's time to start this:

20100205_HeddleThreading1.jpgI have now started enough weaving projects to realize that I really don't mind warping looms.  If you need to clear your head and refocus, warping a loom is a perfect activity.   At one level, it's very "lock and load", the tasks are simple and repetitive, hands are engaged.  On another level, you are forced to keep both brain and hands in action, especially if the pattern you need to use when threading your heddles has a longer repeat.  For the color gamp project I am working on, the final product will be a huck lace blanket.  Each section is made up of 40 threads of the same color and the heddle threading pattern is 40 ends wide.  It's memorizable, but you have to pay attention.   I've done the heddle threading for all but the last two color sections (I could have kicked myself when I found that I left my camera at home last night) and I've had to pull the threads out and re-start on three or four of the colors because I found that I was off somewhere.   Whenever I let my mind drift off, it's easy for something to get out of whack.

And that makes this the perfect perfect project for me right now.  There's a lot spinning around in my head these days and projects like this help me put that stuff into another compartment and keep me centered -- not to mention provide me with some color therapy... Chicago has been nothing if not unremittingly grey this winter. 

I'm also making good headway on my Blooming 9 Patch.  All the strips have been sewn and I'm starting on the process of sewing them together.  I got three of them sewn together yesterday and looking at them made me feel so good!  The lines and seams are mostly where they should be and the colors are just blowing me away.   And like the weaving project, this project requires focus now, careful pinning and careful sewing. 

John's Aspinwall is coming together, too.   It actually looks like a real sweater and it is now clear that I won't run out of yarn.   A collar, a zipper, the sewing in of ends and a good blocking are really all that stand between this sweater and it's owner.

I know my blog posts have been a bit infrequent of late... I appreciate those of you who are bearing with me on this.  I do enjoy your comments any your email and hope to get a little better at being regular on posting and responding soon.

Those colours look gorgeous!

*H*A*P*P*Y* *B*I*R*T*H*D*A*Y* !

I hope your day is filled with love, happiness and colour.

xxx

I'm looking forward to watching your progress on this. I'm about to start one of the dishtowel kits off that same page you linked to, but I really want to try the color gamp next! Is it appropriate for a four shaft loom?

Your rainbow warp is gorgeous. Because I have a small rigid heddle, I don't think I've worked on a project with more than about 80 ends. It's great for scarves and some table runners, but for anything bigger I know I will have to make a lot more pieces. Do you find for doing the bigger projects that it works well to do the warp in smaller chunks, or do you try and block of a whack of time to do it all at once (or as close as you can)?

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