Loom bodging

The Magic Dobby is due for a couple of outings this week. It is well designed for outings, since the loom and stand are each quite portable. 

However, the Magic Dobby also has another excellent feature: several possible locations for warp and cloth beams. In common with many table looms, the default positions for the beams are quite cramped, making it tricky to put on a warp of more than a few metres. Alternative slots on the stand rather than on the loom itself give you much more space. (There’s quite a good image of the extra slots on the cover of the instruction manual.)

When I recently dressed the MD for the first time, I used the beams just as they were provided to me: installed on the stand. The part of my brain that knew I’d done this was working entirely separately from the part of my brain that then planned to take the loom on the road… Because, of course, if the warp and cloth are attached to the stand, the loom is not going to be quite so readily detached from it. 

Ah. 

This particular penny finally dropped yesterday, while I was packing up my work for Tea Green. So I dragged S down to the studio for an improvised loom bodge.

Fortunately, yet another independent part of my brain was planning to use these various slots to hold more than one warp beam, so I had already purchased a second one but not yet installed it. Three beams are an excellent number for bodging with. We were able to install the new warp beam in the conventional location, then crank the warp forward, clamp the end between two lease sticks (just to be on the safe side) and gently transfer it to the new beam. Once it was wound on again, we could turn the old warp beam into the new cloth beam and make the transfer at the other end. And I still have one spare beam on the stand.

I should really have taken pictures, but got a bit too absorbed in the process. There weren’t too many Moments of Jeopardy – moments when dropping it all on the floor really would be fatal – and with four hands to do the work we got it done in about 45 mins.

And then spotted my mistake. I’d passed the cords for the front apron rod right under the loom instead of threading them through the gap between the breast beam and the cross piece. I did take a picture of that, although it is not at all clear:

 

We contemplated this for a while, as you do. Then decided the simplest option was to unscrew the cross piece and reattach it below the cords. The path of least jeopardy.

So now ’tis done. Bodged and ready to hit the road. 

Oh, and I did take a few pictures of the work I was packing up, but the camera battery went flat and is currently charging.

Loom bodging” was posted by Cally on 9 May 2016 at http://callybooker.co.uk

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3 Shades of Grey

new work in grey

Dark and light in the warp with a mid-grey weft. In my scant weaving time this week I have been prototyping something new. It cheered me up a bit when I was feeling quite glum: a good opportunity recently presented itself, but I couldn’t make enough time even to try for it.

new grey from the side

The mid-grey is my favourite yarn of this range. It fulls more readily than any of the other colours and really makes a gorgeous soft finish.

There’s a change to the venue for the Make/Share next week, and – even better – it now includes free beer. I have updated this post with the details.

3 Shades of Grey” was posted by Cally on 6 May 2016 at http://callybooker.co.uk

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More May events

I’ve already told you about the Dundee Design Festival, but that’s not all. May is going to be a busy month hereabouts…

From 14 – 29 May the Tea Green Concept Atelier will be ‘popping up’ in the Old Flour Mill on Exchange Street. 35 artists and makers from across Scotland will be participating, including yours truly. There will be lovely things for sale as well as demos and ‘work in progress’. There’s also a launch party in the evening on 13 May, with free tickets available here.

Atelier poster 1 ONLINE

And just before all that kicks off, on 11 May I will be giving a wee talk about my work at the monthly Make/Share evening – not in Dundee Makerspace this month, but in The Beer Kitchen, 10 South Tay Street. For those who wonder what I do all day (besides grumble about marking, that is), this is your chance to find out.

Make Share May

More May events” was posted by Cally on 26 April 2016 at http://callybooker.co.uk

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Bound

I have been away this week, visiting my mother and Pat in their new house down in England. Last time I visited they had just moved in and most of their things were still in cardboard boxes, but now they are properly settled with the greater part of the house given over to making things of one kind or another. And in the spirit of making things I accompanied Pat on a bookbinding course – a workshop with Lori Sauer under the umbrella of BINDING re:DEFINED.

We made what Lori called a ‘Binder’s Wallet’: a portfolio for bookbinding tools. Now I don’t have many bookbinding tools, so my portfolio is intended to be more general purpose – pencils, scissors, and useful bits of paper – but I can see potential for other applications. Weaving tools don’t really lend themselves to the format, but sewing tools would, and I quite fancy it as a mini design portfolio too. And on my way home I paused at King’s Cross to meet with a friend who is busy with extreme renovations of the house she has just bought. When she saw what I’d made she immediately started planning a wallet of her own for carrying fabric samples, paint cards and pieces of ceramic tiles.

Here’s the one I made. A leather cover with a strap:

leather wallet

From the top:

leather wallet end

The pockets are made of roofing felt and held in place with carbon fibre rods.

felt pockets 1

felt pockets 2

And there is a thick felt page in the middle for needles.

felt insert

There are photos of the workshop on the BINDING re:DEFINED Facebook page. And here are some of the wallets in a gang at the end of day 2.

wallet buddies

I seem to have developed a knack for taking trains when there are massive delays (or there are just many more days when massive delays are an issue), but I got home eventually. And I do love the east coast main line on a sunny spring evening.

Firth of Forth

Bound” was posted by Cally on 22 April 2016 at http://callybooker.co.uk

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Blue Zig-Zags

When I get up to tinker with the dobby chain on the Megado, this is the angle at which I see what I’ve been weaving.

This is single cloth, stripes of huck lace and echo. I’ve now got the Magic Dobby working too, and over there it is more experiments in double huck lace. 

Blue Zig-Zags” was posted by Cally on 8 April 2016 at http://callybooker.co.uk

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