Well, not quite on the loom yet, but this is what I'm aiming for. It's a 32-shaft Echo design I call "Murmurations" because it reminds me of those wonderful rounded forms made by starlings and other flocks of birds as they shape-shift aerobatically across the sky.
A murmuration of starlings (courtesy of Wiktionary)
If you're lucky enough to see one, you will marvel at the sight. As magical as they appear, there are practical reasons for the birds to create these ever-changing forms in flight: They serve to help protect them from predators like peregrine falcons. Like sheep, the starlings create safety in numbers -- and they keep moving as well. Even a peregrine falcon will have a hard time catching a single bird among the hundreds or even thousands in constant motion.
Anyhow, I like the pattern and I love weaving with Echo designs, because you can achieve so many different designs just by changing the tieup and treadling. Like this one in double weave (shown as a detail, because the overall design is really big.)
Or this, woven as Shadow Weave (well, sort of), again shown just as a detail because the design is so large.
So I'm rather excited to start weaving and see the results. (Side comment: A friend and I were talking about the differences between a weaving design as seen in Fiberworks versus how it turns out when it's woven. I see Fiberworks as a sort of "flight simulator" -- that is, it gives you a pretty good approximation of what you're going to get on the loom, but you never really know until you weave it up.) And the weft color makes a difference, of course. And the sett, and the beat...
Here are my warp colors, in 16/2 unmercerized cotton, to be set at 48 epi.
The colors don't show up really well in this photo. That's mint green on the left and royal blue on the right. So the weft for my first design (seen as the first photo in this post) will probably be a copper/rust color, serving as a complement to the blue and turning the mint green into more of a rusty gold.
This post is dedicated to good intentions, because my Megado loom isn't completely dressed yet. The warp is beamed, but now I have to thread some 1,200 ends.
View from the front
Rear view
So here's a toast to weaving in the new year, to challenging ourselves, to threading myriad numbers of heddles, and to keeping our fingers crossed that our designs will translate really well from Fiberworks to the loom!
And to weavers everywhere: Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Bright Solstice, Joyous Kwanzaa, and best wishes for any and every celebration at this time of year.
Thanks for reading!
1 comment:
HAPPY threading and blessed and adventurous year ahead.
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