It was love at first sight. Let’s just hope they don’t breed…
Happy 4th of July, everybody! Here we are also celebrating Twisp’s 100th birthday.
It was love at first sight. Let’s just hope they don’t breed…
Happy 4th of July, everybody! Here we are also celebrating Twisp’s 100th birthday.
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My Tuesday hiking group went up to the abandoned fire lookout on Leecher Mountain yesterday. That is right above our place so the group picked me up at 8:15 AM on their way up the road to the National Forest.

Leecher Mountain Lookout
It’s not a very long hike, only about a mile from the locked gate, but the views to the west and north into the Methow Valley are very good. Not much snow left on the high peaks. We are having a drier than normal year in the northern part of the Cascades.
I also climbed the stairs as far as I could go (you can’t actually enter the lookout) and could gaze out to the Okanogan valley to the east and our own Benson Creek drainage to the north, but there was nothing particularly picture-worthy.
Rick and I drove down to Wenatchee in the afternoon, “did Costco” and then picked up a Wells Cargo enclosed utility trailer that we found last week on Craig’s List. It’s in fine shape and we are quite happy with it. Then we had dinner with friends in Wenatchee before driving home, arriving close to midnight. A long day!
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For some reason, I haven’t been taking too many pictures lately. On the other hand, a lot of what we have been spending time on doesn’t seem really picture or blog worthy. I mean, how interesting could it be to see a picture of us mowing the (very big) lawn, planting shrubs, watering the field, or weeding the garden?
However, I am considering buying another loom, so here is a picture:
It’s a Herald loom – they were built in Lodi, Ohio and the company is no longer in business. I haven’t been able to find out too much about them on the internet. The current owner lives up the Twisp River, and she bought it from someone on Whidbey Island. It is a 48″ wide, 8-harness jack loom and some of the other women in my guild have given it good marks. Apparently it has some features in common with Gilmore looms. It is currently residing at our guild room, and if I do buy it that is where it will have to stay, as I certainly have no room for another large object here! It needs some TLC – last week I made 80 new tie-up cords out of Texsolv for the treadles, and have started giving it a good cleaning and waxing. I hope to get a warp on it by next week and see what it feels like to treadle, how good a shed it makes (the space you need to throw the shuttle through), etc.
Here at home on the Macomber, I have been steadily weaving away on “rag rugs”, trying to build up some inventory and work my way through the large amount of fabric and mill-end selvage material I bought with the loom 2 years ago. So, a gallery of recent rugs:

wool blanket cut into strips

wool blanket, each side a different color, cut in strips

wool blanket, each side a different color, cut in strips

wool flannel, purple and red

bright red wool blanket and accent stripes

Blue jeans denim; that's a shadow, not dirt (I hope)

5 shades of denim in repeating sequence

Pendleton blanket fringed selvage
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Here’s what I was doing for 5 days last week:

A weaving workshop with Judith MacKenzie McCuin and 10 other lucky souls. This was my second year and I was pleased to find how much I have learned in the past year and how much better I was able to absorb new information. That’s my little portable “Baby Mac” out in the middle of the floor with the sunshine falling on it (Macomber model CP, 20″ weaving width and 8 harnesses). I chose a 4-color shadow weave project this year, and there were plenty of challenges and mistakes along the way – we call these “learning opportunities”!
The format is quite open. Everyone does their own thing and gets Judith’s help with whatever that is. So we can all learn from each other’s challenges and mistakes… er, learning opportunities.
Along the way, we learned a neat way to wind a warp from novelty and leftover yarns, Judith gave us a lecture on “Towel 101” (bath towels, not kitchen towels), and she always has some dye pots going in the back yard, so people were out there dyeing warps and whatever else came to hand. Lots of fun!
Yes, it would have been nice to have more than a week between this and the conference in Spokane. But there was no way I was going to miss this one… no way!

Lisa's waffle weave towels in natural colored cotton

Batsy's double-sided rug for her new kitchen

Robin's color-and-weave towels

Linda's "Hempathy" (hemp-blend) towels
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My 3-day tapestry weaving class with James Koehler was intense but rewarding. He normally teaches this “Introduction to Tapestry Weaving” as a 5-day workshop, and tried to cover all the bases for us in 3 days. This made for some long days but we got through a lot. We each wove a sampler that would look something like this when done:

James Koehler's tapestry sampler
He brought his full range of yarns (which he dyes himself) so we had a lot of colors to choose from. I went with a “southwest” color scheme:

my sampler underway
At this point, we had warped our looms using his (very cool and new to me) method, woven a header which allowed us to practice laying in the yarns with “bubbles” of slack to keep it from drawing in, did a twined edge and hem with the cotton warp, then a wool hem and soumak turning row. Then we practiced 3 kinds of vertical joins before moving on to angles. Later on we did a curve with a smooth outline, variations of hatchure, and the beginning of color blending techniques. That’s pretty much where we ran out of time. I finished my sampler at home this morning and have it off the loom. Once I do all the finishing, I will post a picture. It has its problems, but hey! it’s kind of handsome and my first tapestry.
Most of my other pictures look like this:

clasped weft, move #1
Hopefully these will help me remember the details of some of his methods, which are pretty hard to describe in words.
Since Ruby Leslie’s 3-day workshop (“There Must Be 50 Ways to Use Your Color”) was being held in the conference room on the main floor of our dorm, I was able to visit and see what they were up to. I must take this class some day if she offers it again at a conference. I think the basic idea was to take a color scheme and explore what you could do with it using different materials (cottons, tencel, silk, silk/wool) and different weave structures.






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The main event for me on the second day of the conference was an all-day class with the keynote speaker for the conference, Ruby Leslie. She is a production weaver and had many beautiful scarves and many, many samples that showed her experiments with weave structure, yarn choice, and color.

2 samples in a "Fiesta" colorway
The above samples show how the perception of the other colors and of the overall piece is affected by switching the position of the yellow and blue-green yarns in the warp.
She is teaching a 3-day post-conference workshop called “Lost in Translation: There must be 50 ways to use your color”, which if course I now wish I was taking in addition to the tapestry workshop. I must clone myself.
Here are some color wraps she had made for the hands-on workshop, showing the color progressions to be used in a series of warps:

I will probably wrap up this blog series when I get home from conference. Have a great week!
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Greetings from Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, where I am attending the biannual weaving conference of the Association of Northwest Weavers’ Guilds (ANWG), along with 7 of my fellow members of the Methow Valley Spinners and Weavers Guild.
The Gonzaga campus is very pretty, the weather is warm, there are a lot of neat people here, the food is mediocre and the dorm room is acceptable! I opted to have a room to myself for a slight additional fee, and am glad of that. They have provided high speed (hardwire) internet in the room, so that lets me blog! Life is good.
Today I took a half-day workshop in the morning from Sharon Alderman, a well-known weaver/teacher. It was called “Snazzy Yarns: how to use them, not lose them.” I learned a lot and am pleased that my understanding of weaving is far enough along that I could follow her when she started drawing diagrams of threadings and treadlings.
After lunch I went down to the vendors’ market and also visited the exhibits put on by various member guilds from western Canada and the northwestern U.S. There is a lot of great work there, and some of the guilds created really beautiful, interesting and/or whimsical displays. The conference theme is “Weaving Waves of Color” and the guild displays were built off that theme.

2 Dye 4 study group

amazing felted display

fabulous fish

collection of scarves

inspiration from colors of Central Oregon

towels inspired by colors of nature
My friend Diana and I took off mid-afternoon in the car to visit some of the local art galleries that are showing weaving in conjunction with the conference. It was well worth the journey. The Tinman Gallery is showing the creative clothing of Anita Luvera Mayer of Anacortes, WA. The Chase Gallery in the Spokane City Hall has 7 artists on display, including tapestry artists James Koehler of Santa Fe, NM and Sarah Swett of Moscow, ID. There is also amazing work from Rebecca Laurence, who seems to be a master of stonework, woodcarving, metal working and astounding beadwork. I think she is from Spokane. Artisan’s Wares Gallery (in the big Riverside shopping complex) has beautiful felted wearable art and wall art by Theshini Naicker of Rossland, British Columbia. Those were our favorite displays. I will be taking a 3-day post-conference workshop from James Koehler next Monday through Wednesday, so it was interesting to see some of his work in person.
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… everyone you know, including yourself, seems to be turning 60!
My life this past week seemed to turn into an extended celebration. I have been wined and dined, toasted, treated, spoiled like crazy! Thanks to everyone (you know who you are) who made it special.

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Friends from Ashland, Oregon visited this weekend. We have known them for over 35 years, and as always, it was a great visit, although short.
On Friday we went up the Twisp River and then Frost Road to the Big Buck Wildlife Area, and walked from Big Buck Lake to Aspen Lake, a distance of about 2 miles along old ranch roads. The arrowleaf balsamroot (“sunflowers”) are in full bloom now, and it is really a spectacular year for this signature flower of the Methow. The plants are vigorous and full of flowers, and the hillsides are carpeted in yellow.

just like old times
A view of Mocassin Lake and the snow-covered peaks of the North Cascades/Pasayten Wilderness to the north:

Mocassin Lake amidst sunflower-covered hills
And here are some shots of the arrowleaf balsamroot:


We finished up the day at the Twisp River Pub, where local musicians Leah Larson, Brad Pinkerton and Paul Gitchos opened for the band – bluegrass/”alternative country” vocalists Laura Love and Mollie O’Brien, with guitarist Rich Moore and slide-guitarist Orville Johnson. The place was packed!
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Last week I finished three more of the overshot table mats. I made two of them a little longer, so despite the fact that I had put on extra warp, I ran short on the third one and could only do three repeats of the pattern instead of five. However, it works great in the center of our dining table, and I love the colors, so I am happy with it.
Blue/green colorway (the short one):

Blue/Green colorway using the 8-5-3-2 treadling sequence
And here is the Purple series:

Purple color sequence, treadling 1 to 12 and then back to 1
I also did one in greys and browns, using the 8-5-3-2 treadling, but unexpectedly sold it to someone at the guild meeting in Omak last Saturday. I had just finished hemming them that morning, and hadn’t taken pictures yet. But she said she would send me a digital picture, so hopefully that will happen.
So now I am moving on to rag rugs on the big loom (a 48″, 4-harness Macomber), and will keep doing scarves and other fun things on the little loom (a 20-inch, 8-harness “Baby Mac” from Macomber that I bought used last spring for a workshop loom).
I hadn’t put rug warp on the big loom since I bought it 2 years ago, and started this whole weaving adventure. The woman I bought the loom from had woven rugs on it exclusively, and she came over and helped me set it up the first time. It turned out she put on enough to weave about 35 rugs, so that is all I did for the first 8 months!
The loom has a sectional warp beam, so you wind on 2-inch sections at a time from spools on a rack, through a tensioning device that is mounted on the back beam.

I was a little daunted by doing this by myself, but it actually went OK with no major snafus. Fortunately I had taken pictures of some key steps from last time, and I have a good booklet (“Sectional Warping Made Easy” by Russell Groff). It took me about 5 hours to beam the warp, and another 5-6 to thread the heddles, sley the reed and tie on to the apron for the first rug. I am going to make them 28″ wide this time (they were 26″ last time) and put on somewhere in excess of 50 yards, so that should make a lot of rugs! Good thing, because I have a lot of material that I bought from Sheila with the loom, and from Pendleton mills over the last 2 years.
I have woven 4 rugs so far this week, but won’t take pictures until they are really done (hemmed and washed.)
Other than that – it’s spring in the Methow! We have had rain on and off, which is bringing the grasses and wildflowers on the hillsides out even better. There should be some beautiful spring hikes coming up…
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