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MANITOBA WEAVERS and
FIBRE ARTISTS (MWFA) |
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Everything Has
Its Season!
"There's a lot of lovely wool
here. We should do a guild project." A guild
member at one of MWFA's "nearly-annual" year-end yarn sales
was referring to a box of mostly 2-ply,
vegetable-dyed yarns that had been donated.
In the Spring of 2004, a planning
session for this project became the program for a MWFA meeting. |
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In an effort to avoid having
the project bogged down with unknowns, then-president Susan Styrchak
weighed and counted the skeins and wove two samples, one sett
at 8 epi and one at 12 epi. The samples were woven in tabby and
twill and washed to determine shrinkage. Susan noted that such
activities seem to be included in "other duties" in our
president's job profile!
It was decided to weave a
blanket in three panels to allow for a different colour or design in each
panel, if desired. A 30-inch width would be an
easy width to weave, and 90" would finish to a single-bed size,
allowing for draw-in and fulling. In addition, one long warp would
waste less yarn than three individual warps and require the use of only one loom.
Finally, if Susan's loom
at the lake were to be set up for this project, guild members could have a
weavers' retreat at her cottage (a setting more amenable when the water is
turned on, but always available) to complete the project.
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The sample had many golds, yellow greens and
browns. Someone suggested adding purple. There were 10 skeins
of grey that could be dyed purple for the weft. A new colour
wrapping with less gold was more appealing. Yellow-green is opposite
red-violet on the colour wheel, so dyeing the grey weft magenta looked
promising. The suggested purple became "red-violet".
The weft was dyed in two batches, one pale magenta,
still suggestive of the original grey yarn, and the other a brilliant
colour with no trace of grey. The warp was made and rolled on. |
| The weavers met at the cottage
on a weekend in late September to thread, sley and plan the weft sequence for
the three panels. Then the weaving began! MWFA members enjoyed two glorious Fall days at the lake getting the project
underway. The weaving was completed over several sessions, and after
it was cut off the loom, the blanket was
assembled, washed, and fulled, bringing the project to a successful
completion in the Fall of 2005.
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