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Archive for the ‘fiberarts’ Category

Fall Equinox

Today is the fall equinox, and we have been busy getting ready for winter.  The firewood is all split and stacked.  A big windstorm brought down lots of dead pine needles last week, and Rick has been raking them up and getting ready for a yard waste run to the dump.  And finally, after nearly three years, we are getting stain on the cedar shingle siding for the shop addition and carport!  The fellow doing the work also power-washed the original shingles and put new stain on them.  The color isn’t a complete match (since the same color was put over old weathered shingles and new shingles) but it sure looks a lot better than it did before.

shop stain Sep 2013 1

shop stain Sep 2013 2 - Copy

carport stain Sep 2013

Up in the studio, I put a new warp for plaited twill scarves on the big loom.  I haven’t done these for a couple of years now – how time flies!  I promised one to someone almost a year ago, and it has to be done by the end of October.  That seems like a long ways off, but since I will be gone so much in October, it really won’t be.  And it won’t hurt to do some of these for the upcoming guild sales and holiday season.

perle cotton warp and tencel weft

perle cotton warp and tencel weft

Part of the process was doing some loom upgrade and maintenance on the 48″ Macomber loom.  This is actually the first time I have used the 4 additional harnesses I added to this loom, and I needed to replace the chains that the original four heddle frames hung from off the jacks.  Now all the frames are hanging at the same (and correct) height.

new chains hanging the heddle frames from the jacks

new chains hanging the heddle frames from the jacks

I also had a lot of trouble with the tie-up hooks popping off the lamms when I first started weaving the scarf.  Since it mostly seemed to be happening with harnesses 5-8, I knew it had something to do with using those for the first time.  My theory, which proved to be correct, was that the slots in the treadles were not completely smooth and were binding on the shafts of the “superhooks”, making them pop off the lamms.  (Don’t you love this weaving terminology?)

tie-up hooks connect the treadles to the lamms

tie-up hooks connect the treadles to the lamms

So I took the time to smooth down the slots in the treadles with sandpaper, then smear some paste wax inside each one with a thin stick.  Now it is all working as smooth as can be and I am a happy weaver, not having to get down and crawl around under the loom every 5 minutes reconnecting a hook or two.

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Prayer Flags

At the Chamber Music Festival last July, I ran into a woman who was interested in some of my undulating twill towels in “black and red” to go with her kitchen colors at their second home north of Winthrop.  I discovered I already had a cone of black 8/2 cotton, about 2 lbs so enough to put on a 12-yard warp.  So, even though I thought I was done with those towels, I tied on a new warp a couple of weeks ago, and on Monday of this week, finished them off.

I don’t remember where I got that black cotton, but it turned out to be a pain in the neck.  Quite “tender” so I had a lot of breakage problems.  I finally figured out how to coax it along – just the right amount of tension, don’t advance it too far so the fell line (where the beater hits the cloth) remains in a narrow area where the reed is vertical, etc.  But it was worth it!  I really like how these turned out – so much so that I have ordered more black 8/2 cotton from WEBS and it is on its way to me now.  It is their own line, Valley Yarns “Eight-Two”.   Good stuff, and a decent price if you order enough to get the 25% discount.

 

Here are two of the black and red ones:

undulating twill towels, black warp and red weft

undulating twill towels, black warp and red weft

I did 4 other colors:  banana yellow, turquoise green, elm green and madder brown.

tree bark black warp 5 colors

Also this week I was trying to respond to the final call from Confluence Gallery for submission to a show they will open the first part of November.  It is titled “Visions of Verse”.  They have 33 works from local poets and ask visual artists to respond to the written works.  I was really drawing a blank, and also couldn’t see how I could get anything significant and new, done in time, as I will be gone on and off for most of October.  But then it came to me – these new towels are perfect for a poem by Danica Kaufman titled Prayer Flags of Daily Life !  So there you have it.

Also working on some placemats at home:

new placemats underway

new placemats underway

using this fabric!

using this fabric!

 

 

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Sotis Cloth Wrap-up

I decided that this past weekend was the time to finish off the warp on my portable “Baby Mac” loom.  This was what was left from the 3-day “Warp-Faced Weaves” workshop I took in June from Kay Faulkner at the ANWG Conference in Bellingham.  I had previously done a sampler and hoped I had enough warp left for 4 placemats.

I had also worked out various motifs for pick-up in the sotis areas, using Excel for a charting tool.  The plan was to do all the mats the same, except put a different pick-up motif in the 4 corners of each one.

Here’s the first one underway:

first pick-up pattern in sotis cloth areas

first pick-up pattern in sotis cloth areas

I also used, as a guide, Kay Faulkner’s article Sotis Cloth from West Timor in the March/April 2013 issue of Handwoven magazine.  At each end, I wove 1-1/2″ with a single weft in plain weave, to reduce bulk.  These were later turned under twice and sewn down for the final hems.  The body of the mat is woven with a doubled weft.

I only had enough warp to finish 3 mats of the same size, plus another small piece about half their size.  But that is OK, since these are a little wide for a typical placemat (I was stuck with the warp width I had put on, long story).

table mats

 

Will I do this again?  Actually, yes!  But next time, I will use mercerized cotton (for placemats).  For this workshop project, I used Valley Yarns 8/2 Cotton from WEBS, and it is lovely stuff – soft, smooth, strong, great colors.  But on washing, it didn’t so much shrink as “bloom”, especially in the sotis areas where 3 ends go through one heddle (alabaster, in this case) and a single end goes through the other heddle (brown, in this case).  The 3 ends that go together, kind of fluffed up and wound up obscuring the pattern in the wider stripes.  The brown “dots” in these wide stripes are much more visible in the first picture above, on the loom and before washing.

 

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End of Rug Warp

Finally came to the end of the current rug warp – 30 rugs completed, of various sizes, in the last 2 months.  I have more Pendleton selvage material to use up, and things I want to try, but for now I am tired of weaving rugs and ready to do something else on that loom!  I actually started this late last December and have worked my way through two 50-yard warps, weaving 57 rugs and “ruglets” total.

At least they are selling reasonably well – five so far at the Confluence Gallery show, and six so far up at the Lost River Winery tasting room – plus a couple through Winthrop Gallery in the last 2 months.

These two were done in mid-July:

R163 - fiesta orange - sold at winery

R163 – fiesta orange – sold at winery

R164 - smooth red wool selvages - sold at winery

R164 – smooth red wool selvages – sold at winery

Then, with the Confluence Gallery show coming up, I got into what I call “mixed selvages” rugs.  I like to combine a variety of Pendleton blanket selvages, combining both colors and textures (smooth “worms” and the more fringe-like selvages).

R165 - for Confluence show, and sold

R165 – for Confluence show, and sold

R166 - for Confluence show, and sold

R166 – for Confluence show, and sold

I liked the above one so much, I made another for us to keep (always a slight variation as I use up materials, though):

R167 - kept this one!

R167 – kept this one!

R168 was a little “ruglet” and I didn’t get a picture.  These are a great way to use up small amounts of material from a bigger rug.

The rest of these were done in mid-August:

R169 - a new colorway of mixed selvages

R169 – a new colorway of mixed selvages

R170 - slight variant of R169 - I kept this one, too

R170 – slight variant of R169 – I kept this one, too

R171 - royal blue fringe alternating with colored worms

R171 – royal blue fringe alternating with colored worms

R172 - another one for Confluence Gallery, and sold

R172 – another one for Confluence Gallery, and sold

R173 - a third one of this type - for Confluence

R173 – a third one of this type – for Confluence

R174 - and END OF WARP!!

R174 – and END OF WARP!!

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It’s been a busy last 3 weeks, but it’s time to catch up the blog a bit.

The “Inside Out” show opened at the Confluence Gallery in Twisp on Saturday, August 3.  My dad, brother and sister-in-law were still here for the last weekend of the chamber music festival, so we all went down to the gallery the day before to see the show before the official opening.  The actual opening was very well attended so it was a festive atmosphere!

Inside Out opening 8/3/13

Inside Out opening 8/3/13

P1020895

more folks at the opening

The following weekend, Rick’s sister and a friend of hers came over to see the Confluence Gallery show, our exhibit up at the Lost River Winery tasting room, and go on the annual Home Tour which is organized by the Confluence Gallery.  They request that people not take pictures of the homes on the tour, so I am afraid I have none to show.  The theme this year was “Eclectic Methow” (eclectic:  deriving ideas, style, or taste from a broad and diverse range of sources) and we did see some very interesting homes and sites.

Here are a few more pictures I took at the gallery:

P1030624

P1030626

P1030627b

one of my rugs on chair in background

There must be some magic to having one of my rugs displayed on that chair – as of yesterday, I have sold three rugs off that chair!  I believe all of them were sold to people visiting the valley from out of town (I know one was shipped to California).

Summer Wednesdays mean jazz night in the beer garden at the Twisp River Pub.  Last week we went down for dinner and music with the Pasayten Quartet and Laura Love on vocals.  She not only has a great voice, she is a real entertainer!

P1020896

The weekend of the Home Tour (August 10-11) there were strong thunderstorms with wind and heavy rain at times, mostly at night.  We actually had a beautiful sunny day for the home tour itself, thank goodness.  But this resulted in major mudslides up in the North Cascades that shut down Highway 20 for a little over a week!    It is reported they had to remove 3000 dump truck loads of gooey mud and rocks, plus repair guard rails, set up new drainage systems, and repair damaged roadway.

We drove over to the Coast on Sunday August 18th for a family gathering, and had to go over Stevens Pass, which was actually fine until we hit the little towns on the west side.  Between low speed limits and traffic signals, it got pretty clogged up.  But we made it to Camano Island to get together with my Dad, my two siblings and their spouses (sister and brother in law came from Colorado) and one of my nieces and her fiance, who had flown in from Texas.  It was totally worth the drive over to see everyone!

clan gathering 1

clan gathering 1

clan gathering 2

clan gathering 2

They re-opened the pass the next morning, so we were able to drive home over the “North Cross” highway.  The lakes behind the dams (power for Seattle City Light) were an amazing milky blue-green color, presumably due to all the silt in the water from the heavy rains.

Ross Lake - August 19, 2013

Ross Lake – August 19, 2013

Washington Pass Overlook

Washington Pass Overlook – headwaters of the Methow Valley

I have been weaving a lot of rugs, but will save those pictures for the next post.  It’s time to move on with my day!

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Sorting Out Sotis

A few days ago I finally unfolded my Baby Mac workshop loom, got out my notes from Kay Faulkner’s 3-day workshop on Warp-Faced Weaves at the ANWG Conference in June, and went back to figuring out what to do with my 4-yard warp.  I last blogged about it in this post after the conference.  I hadn’t made it much farther than getting the warp on the loom.

My warp is threaded for a combination of plain weave sections alternated with the Sotis cloth (patterns from West Timor).  Kay’s notes are based on a nomenclature she came up with that makes sense to her, but isn’t terribly clear until you figure it out.  I also had her article from Handwoven Mar/Apr 2013, and studying the weaving pattern from that was a great help.  I wound up making my own notes about how to weave the 6 basic patterns she gave us.

Basic Sotis patterns 1-4

Basic Sotis patterns 1-4

Basic Sotis patterns 5-6

Basic Sotis patterns 5-6

In the above photo, you can see where I was trying the “warp wrapping” with a banana yellow color, in one of the plain weave areas.  Not with a great deal of success.  However, I am not sure I want to use this technique in my project so may or may not follow up with more experimentation.

I was more interested in getting a pattern motif in the Sotis areas, which has to be done with manual pickup of threads for this simple threading.  After a first attempt, I was starting to understand how this works, and made a plan for a motif.

Sotis motif plan

Sotis motif plan

and what do you know – it worked!

Sotis pickup

Basically, this is done within the context of Basic Pattern 4.  In my sampler, of the 60 heddles threaded for each side section, 30 are threaded with a single dark brown thread (can be thought of as “tabby a” for the section) and the other 30 alternate heddles are threaded with 3 cream threads run together (can be thought of as “tabby b” for the section).  The ones with 3 threads are referred to as “heavy”, to alternate with the dark brown “fine” threads.  But, those 30 heavy threads can also be lifted in alternating groups of 15.  This is how you get some of the patterns.  The pickup motif is done on a ground of basic pattern 4, where one bar uses just heavy “a” and the next bar uses heavy “b”.

I may try out the “exposed weft” technique next, then move on to weaving some placemats using combinations of the basic patterns, and incorporating my little pickup motif.

I also now know why Kay does some of her more elaborate Sotis pieces on a 24-harness computer loom, where she can treadle the Sotif motifs and not use pickup!  It works, but is slow and for now at least, requires vigilant attention to detail.

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The $11 Solution

Several months ago someone gave me part of an older Nilus LeClerc double-ended electric bobbin winder.  She had gotten it years ago with a loom purchase, but “some of the parts didn’t make it into the box”.  Specifically, it was missing the end that slides in a groove, and the rheostat foot control.

Leclerc hybrid before fix

I tried to get the missing part but the people at LeClerc (in Quebec) said this was an older style and they don’t keep spare parts for older machines.  Studying the pictures on their website, I could see that the new ones have the spring mounted down in the groove, not on the shaft of the part that slides in the groove (which is what this one would have had).  So I figured I was out of luck.

At the ANWG conference at the end of June, someone was selling some old weaving equipment in one of the booths.  Among this was an older Nilus LeClerc double-ended winder.  So I took a chance and bought it.  I should have been more careful in checking it out, because when I got home the foot control (wrapped up and taped in paper) was broken.  However, I could get it fixed at a sewing machine shop in Wenatchee, although as it turns out Rick was able to take it apart, bend a flange back into place, and put it back together all cleaned up and oiled.  So now I had a working winder!  You can see how the spring is mounted in this picture.  The moving part is tightened down with wing nuts from below, once positioned in the groove for a particular bobbin length.

LeClerc winder from ANWG conf

In the meantime, I got to wondering if LeClerc couldn’t sell me a new base plate and moving end from their current model.  So after some back and forth with calls and emails, they agreed to this and it came last week.   Or at least, they sent the moving part and a spring – not the base with the groove!  I guess I didn’t communicate clearly what I was expecting.  However, I am fortunate to be married to a guy who is both handy and handsome (a Red Green Show reference).

He had to trim the wood that slides in the groove – very carefully, on the table saw, until it fit just right.  Then he had to re-position the motor so the two ends that hold the bobbin line up (in a brand new winder, the motor is a different model and is offset on one side).  He had to figure out how to mount the spring in the groove from below.  But in the end, it worked great!  Here is my hybrid winder:

LeClerc hybrid winder 1

new sliding part on left, old motor end (re-positioned) on right

LeClerc hybrid winder 2

I still have to get a foot control, but the sewing machine store in Wenatchee says they have a box full of old used sewing machine rheostat foot controls with plug for motor and light that I can get for $10-$15 (just like the one on the ANWG conference one, which I have been using for now).

Now I have been using it to wind off spun singles from my spinning wheel’s Woolee Winder bobbin onto plastic spools.  I learned this from Judith MacKenzie – spin all your fiber and put on plastic storage bobbins as you go, then ply from those bobbins.  Saves a ton of money on extra spinning wheel bobbins.

But the electric winder goes like a bat out of hell, and I had to just barely depress the foot pedal to keep it slow enough.  Otherwise the spun singles would break – they are a lot more “tender” than weaving yarns you would wind off a cone onto a bobbin.  It was hard to control the speed, and when I was done, the foot pedal itself was really hot.

So this is where we get to the $11 solution part.  I had picked up a tip from one of Peggy Osterkamp’s books that you could use a plug-in dimmer switch between the wall outlet and the foot control, as an extra rheostat.  But none of our local valley hardware stores had such an item – they just have the kind that are wired into a light switch on the wall.  So I went online and found this on Amazon:

lamp dimmer for winder

It totally solved the problem.  I plugged the dimmer into the outlet, plugged the foot control into the dimmer, then adjusted the sliding control until the winder was turning at a slowish speed with the pedal fully depressed.  The speed stayed nice and constant so I could concentrate on tensioning the yarn and filling the bobbin evenly.  The foot pedal wasn’t hot at all when I was done.  And this item only cost about $11!

So now I guess I will try to sell the one I got at the conference, and keep the “hybrid”.

Final note:  4 rugs finished this week.  The first three were an order from friends for their home at Lochaerie Resort on Lake Quinault – Chris picked the materials from my stash of Pendleton selvages when they were here last April.

R159 Lochaerie 1

R159 Lochaerie 1

R160 Lochaerie 2

R160 Lochaerie 2

R161 Lochaerie 3

R161 Lochaerie 3

R162 - fiesta time!

R162 – fiesta time!

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I have been spending a lot of time weaving rugs the last couple of weeks, since returning from the weaving conference in Bellingham.  I used up the last of the warp I had on that loom doing these:

"Ruglets" R143 & R144

“Ruglets” R143 & R144

R145 - sold last weekend at Winthrop Gallery

R145 – sold last weekend at Winthrop Gallery

"Ruglets" R146 & R147

“Ruglets” R146 & R147

"Ruglets" R148 & R149

“Ruglets” R148 & R149

R150 - Pendleton wool shirting selvages

R150 – Pendleton wool shirting selvages

I am now working my way through my still rather large collection of Pendleton blanket and shirting selvages – trying to make some headway on using up materials I gathered at the mill outlets over the last several years.  When I don’t have much of something left, I am either working it into a full size rug along with other colors and textures, or making “ruglets”.  These are about 18″ x 30″ and I have found them useful around our house, at least, as hearth mats, bench mats, cat mats, small floor mats, or whatever.

Around July 1st I wound a new rug warp (about 47 yards) onto the sectional beam, and tied it on to the existing threading and pulled it through to the front beam.  No sleying and threading, I love it!  I also like the colors in the new warp.

rug warp June 2013

happiness is a new warp!

I had wound new warps for placemats (on Kingston the 32″ Macomber) and undulating twill towels (on Mother Mary’s loom, the 40″ Mac at the guild room) before leaving for conference.  Got the one for Kingston tied on, pulled through and wound onto the back beam, also the first week of July.  I am not sure when I will start actually weaving on these, but here is a picture with some of the fabrics I will be using:

placemat warp and fabrics ready for action

placemat warp and fabrics ready for action

Then it was back to rug weaving.  I am having a lot of fun combining different types and colors of the Pendleton selvages, and using up my stash in a creative way.  I finished these last week before leaving for the Coast on July 5th:

R151 - pretty much the same as R150 at the end of the previous warp

R151 – pretty much the same as R150 at the end of the previous warp

R152 - a small mat using up the last of these 2 colors

R152 – a small mat using up the last of these 2 colors

R153 - gray/teal shirting selvages alternated with bright "worms" at the ends

R153 – gray/teal shirting selvages alternated with bright “worms” at the ends

R154 - same approach, different colored "worms:

R154 – same approach, different colored “worms”

R155 - alternated with "worms" throughout, but changing colors

R155 – alternated with “worms” throughout, but changing colors

My rug numbers, by the way, (Rxxx) indicate the number of rugs I have woven since I bought my first loom about 6 years ago.  The woman I bought it from wove nothing but rugs, and she got me started.  That was all I did the first 6 months or so.

This week I finished three more, very similar to the ones I did back in June before weaving conference.

R156 - using same materials as R142

R156 – using same materials as R142

R157 & R158 - same materials as R140 and using up the last of it, too!

R157 & R158 – same materials as R140 and using up the last of it, too!

In between, we went to the coast to visit family & friends, and celebrate Rick’s 65th birthday.

Rick's 65th 1Rick's 65th 2

It’s been lovely here in the valley – we have had enough rain on and off to keep things relatively green.  There have been a couple of really hot spells (high 90’s) alternated with temps in the 80’s, thundershowers, etc.  We drove back into the valley last Sunday, coming over the North Cascades Hwy, to encounter a total downpour by the time we reached Winthrop!  By later that evening, however, the storm had moved off and it was back to warm and dry.

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Tired But Happy

I got home yesterday afternoon after a week in Bellingham at the NW Weavers’ Conference.  What a week!  Western Washington University was the venue, and the grounds and staff were wonderful.  We were in dorm rooms (I opted for a single) so the accommodations were rather spartan, but the bed was comfortable and my dorm was quiet.

Tuesday through Thursday I took a 3-day pre-conference workshop with Kay Faulkner from Australia.  The title was “East Meets West:  Warp Faced Weaves”.  She had an article in the March/April 2013 issue of Handwoven magazine on Textiles of West Timor, including a project with sotis cloth, which was one of the types of patterns we were going to do.  Here is the workshop description:

“Most weavers look towards European and American weave structures for inspiration. Some real gems can be found in Eastern textiles. Warp faced textiles in SE Asia are usually woven on back strap looms but they often can be modified to suit multishaft looms. Analysis of ethnic textiles will provide some interesting additions of technique for the hand weaver. They include warp manipulation, warp wrapping, weft patterning on warp faced cloth. These techniques can then be combined with Western structures to achieve interesting cloth. Consideration will also be given to maximizing the potential of your loom while combining structures.”

It turned out the main effort in the class was designing your warp and getting it on the loom.  I decided to make an 8-inch wide piece, 4 yards long, so I could sample the techniques to be shown in class, and have enough left for 1-2 scarves.  Well, it took me almost 2-1/2 days to get the warp on the loom.  It is sett very closely so only the warp will show.  I was using 8/2 cotton, which means something to a weaver, and my sett was 60 epi (ends per inch).   8″ x 60 = 480 ends right?  Wrong.  It wasn’t until I started actually sleying and threading that I realized my fundamental error, in not taking into account the fact that you thread in pairs of 4 into 2 heddles – 2/2 for stripes in plain weave, 1/3 for the “Sotis” patterns.  So my 480 ends that I had labored over, keeping color order and all, was making a 16″ wide piece, not an 8″ wide piece!  No wonder it took me so long.  By the middle of the last day I was only this far:

sleyed, threaded and tied on - finallly!

sleyed, threaded and tied on – finally!

This was despite the fact I had spent 12 hours in the workshop room the first 2 days.  I was very tired and getting a little frustrated!  It also turned out it would have been much easier to warp the loom from back to front, but by the time she explained that, it was too late for the way I had wound the warp in my usual way for front to back.

On the third day of the workshop, she was demonstrating various techniques, so I tried to take notes and some pictures while she was doing it.  The workshop handout was brief and somewhat cryptic.  Fortunately, there were some women from Seattle Weavers Guild in the class, who were farther along than I was, so I also have some folks to go to with questions.  I did get started on the first set of patterns before we had to pack up on the last day.  And I am excited about my warp, I really like the colors and if I can work my way through the techniques, I should be able to make the rest of it into placemats.  So stay tuned for progress and pictures in the coming month.

Here are some pictures of workshop projects under way:

P1020741 P1020742 P1020743 P1020745 P1020746

Meanwhile, it was fun hanging out with my friends who had also come over for workshops, and meeting new people.  A number of people from the Methow Valley guild came over on Thursday for the actual conference, which includes 3 half-day seminars as part of the registration.  The fashion show on Thursday was fabulous, many wonderful garments, and beautifully presented with music.  These garments were moved to the Western Gallery in the Fine Arts building on campus, where the Instructor Show, Open Show, and Juried Show exhibits were also to be found.

So speaking of the Juried Show, I had two of my polychrome summer & winter scarves accepted for that show.  I had been pleased that the juror, Bhakti Ziek, had written some very nice comments on my entry forms when they came back to me.  Well, as it turns out, she also gave me an award!  Juror’s Choice 1st Place!

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and here is a picture my friend Deb took with her iPhone:

ANWG 2013 awardI took all three half-day seminars from Kay Faulkner as well, as they had sounded the most interesting when I registered back in January.  There were no handouts and lots of information, but I think I got enough of it to feed my brain and creative side for the next year or two.  Tied weaves, double weave (way beyond the basics) and loom-controlled shibori.

There was also a market with vendors big and small.  I behaved myself pretty well, but did come home with a few tools (including a used LeClerc electric bobbin winder) and some lovely alpaca from Vancouver Island, for future spinning projects.  Morrison Creek Alpacas, highly recommended.

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I am leaving tomorrow for a week-long weaving conference in Bellingham, WA.  It is the NW Weavers Conference 2013, sponsored by ANWG – the Association of Northwest Weavers Guilds.  I am taking a 3-day pre-conference workshop on Tuesday-Thursday, then the conference itself starts on Friday.  It included some mini-workshops (I signed up for 3 half-day workshops on Friday and Saturday) plus a whole slew of other events.  So I will file a report in a little over a week!

Meanwhile, here are some pictures of the three rugs I finished this week, plus some shots from our exhibit at the Lost River Winery tasting room in Winthrop.   It is on the North Cascades Hwy just west of Winthrop (26 Highway 20).  Hours for the summer: Thursday through Monday 11-5 pm.

Here are pictures of the three rugs I took in the studio before taking them up to the tasting room yesterday.  They are all woven with a mix of smooth (“wooly worm”) scraps and fringed selvages I get from the Pendleton Woolen Mill Store in Portland, OR.  I pretty much have to pick these out whenever we are down there, as you never know what they are going to get in from the mill in Pendleton, OR from week to week.  The “wooly worms” are just dumped into a big rolling bin, and I have to go “dumpster diving” (a very dusty affair) to pull out wads of the colors I like.  The fringed selvages come packaged in plastic bags, but as I said, you can’t predict what they are going to have at any moment in time.

R140

R140

R141

R141

R142

R142

and here are some pictures I took this morning up at the tasting room:

back wall behind the tasting bar

back wall behind the tasting bar

main wall to right of tasting bar

main wall to right of tasting bar

on the left as you enter the tasting room

on the left as you enter the tasting room

Rick's entry table from live edge Western Bigleaf Maple and East Indian black walnut

Rick’s entry table from live edge Western Bigleaf Maple and East Indian black walnut

Do notice the beautiful display hangers Rick made for me, using cherry, for both rugs (using drapery ring clips) and scarves.  They are suspended from the picture railings above with fishing line.   He will finish up the wine cabinet (in clear vertical grain fir) this week, so I will get a picture when I get back from conference!

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