My eleven shaft tea towels are done, done, done and it was a lovely project overall.
One of the neat things that happened while I was doing some random treadling between the tea towels is that these lovely hearts magically appeared. This is just a partial pattern treadling and I know I’ll go back to it later and see if I can make it work as a repeating pattern.
The take up on this pattern was more than I expected and I ended up weaving right to the very end of the warp. I really don’t like to go this close to the heddles because the shed was sooooo tight. This is also a pretty good shot of the colourful hair clips that I use to hold the heddles that I’m not using together. Everytime I sit down to thread a new warp I’m delighted by the Easter colours and of course the bunny ears help!
Here are my tea towels off the loom, before wet finishing. I love this shot.
I had a hard time deciding which side would be the ‘right’ side, frankly both are lovely.
These are the four different wefts that I chose for my Spring Tea Towels.
The front and back sides of each of the duplicate coloured wefts.
I placed an order with Maurice Brassard et fils in Quebec for more 2/8 cotton and this lovely box of possibilites arrived in just four days.
One of the things I do right away is take a sharpie to each tube of cotton and mark colour them in. I choose a different colour each time. This not only helps me with using up my stock by age, but really helps with keeping the dye lots seperate.
This shot is a bit blurry, but you can still clearly tell that they are the same colour, from the same supplier but differing dye lots. I have been caught out more than once, I’m sorry to say, with a streak in my web because I got the dye lots mixed up. Surprisingly this has also happened with white cotton, not only with the dyed cotton; I guess there are differences in the bleaching process too.
At this point I update my yarn binder and I can’t say enough about what a good idea this is. I have written blogs about making this binder in the past and it is my best organizational tool. (Focusing on Fibres March 2009 and Confessions of a Compulsive Organizer December 2019); I would be lost without it.
Our Garden is really lovely right now and the perennial borders are at their best. This is a really lovely shot of Penstemon hybrid ‘Garnet’ commonly called Beard Tongue. What a weird name for a truly spectacular summer perennial. The hummingbirds and bummble bees love it.
Ohhh those towels are beautiful!!!
ReplyDeleteI love the shot just off the loom with all the peaches, salmons, and pinks. I, too, often struggle with which is the ‘right’ side of a towel.
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