THE ORIGINAL - Mirrix Looms
Transcription
THE ORIGINAL - Mirrix Looms
THE ORIGINAL TAPESTRY/BEAD CUFF BRACELET WWW.MIRRIXLOOMS.COM 1 COMBINING BEADS & FIBER In this ebook you will learn: • How to combine beads and fiber • Some basic tapestry weaving techniques • How to make a gorgeous cuff bracelet from start to finish WHAT YOU NEED TO BEGIN: -Any size Mirrix Loom with a shedding device. (Alternately you could needle weave this if your loom does not have a shedding device, but we will not be showing how to do that.) -A Tapestry/Bead Cuff Bracelet Kit (or equivalent supplies) -A ten-dent spring -Heddles -A good pair of scissors -A measuring tape -A sewing needle -A bead mat (or a piece of heavy cloth on which to put your beads) Visit Mirrixlooms.com to purchase a Mirrix Loom and Tapestry/Bead Cuff Bracelet Kit to make this project! -A piece of string or ribbon to balance your warping bar if you have a loom larger than the 8″ Lani Loom -A Phillips head screwdriver (depending on the model of Mirrix Loom that you have) 2 A Few Definitions: Warp The thread or yarn that is put on the loom to serve as the base for your weaving. Think of it as your canvas. Weft What you weave into the warp. Warp Coil (or spring) The spring at the top (and optional for the bottom) of your loom that separates the warp threads. Warp Sett The space between warp threads Shed The space between a lowered and raised set of warps through which you pass your weft or your beads in order to weave them into the warp threads. Shedding Device A mechanism that serves to create the shed by raising and lowering alternate warp threads. Selvedges The sides of your piece. Heddle A heddle attaches your shedding device to your warp threads. Used only when weaving tapestry and bead weaving WITH the shedding device, heddles can be either ordered pre-made or you can make them yourself! 3 For this project we will warp like we would for a tapestry project. SET-UP & WARPING Begin to warp by bringing your warp around the loom in the correct pattern. Remember to follow the warping instructions in our warping .pdf and video if you do not have experience warping. We will just briefly go over warping here. warping for tapestry .pdf warping for tapestry video 4 Here are a few tips to remember when warping: 1.) Never let go of your warp. It is important to keep even tension while warping, but it does not have to be tight as you will tighten your warp threads later on. 2.) You can start warping in any direction (first going up over the loom or down under it), but the concept is always the same: Bring your warp around the loom until you hit the warping bar. When you hit the warping bar, loop around it and go back in the direction you just came from. Continue around the loom until you hit the warping bar again. Then, loop around the warping bar and continue back in the direction you came from. Continue this pattern. 3.) Check occasionally to see if you’ve accidentally warped through the center of the loom. Your warp threads should always be going around the loom and should never cross through the center. 4.) Make sure your wooden clips are even horizontally. To tighten them to the loom, turn the plastic screw at the end of the clips. We started by going down the back and under the loom, then up the front. We placed our warp thread in one dent at the top of the loom. We then brought our warp thread over the top of the loom, down the back, looped around the warping bar and started back in the direction we came from (towards the top of the loom). When we brought the warp thread over the top of the loom from the back, we placed our warp in the next dent over. We then continued down the front of the loom, under the bottom beam, up the back and looped around the warping bar. Then we came back the way we came (this time, down the back of the loom and under the bottom beam from the back). We then continued in this pattern. When you’ve warped 15 warps across (count your warp threads by counting the number of threads that are in the warp coil on the top of the loom), tie off securely onto the warping bar. Remember that tight tension is not important, but even tension is. You will also now want to tie your string, cord or ribbon to the other side of the loom and the warping bar if you need to balance your warping bar. At this point, take your spring bar (the thin stainless steel bar) and place it in your warp coil at the top of the loom on top of your warp threads. This will keep your warp threads in the warp coil. Next, swing out your wooden clips to release the warping bar. Grab hold of either side of the warping bar and move it down about an inch and a half from the top of the bottom beam of the loom. Here you may want to tighten your tension slightly and make sure all your warp threads are even and not crossed on both the top and bottom of the loom. Now you are ready to install the shedding device! Swing your wooden clips so they are facing towards you. Place your shedding device into the indentations in the wooden clips. The hole on the shedding device (where the handle will go) should go on the left side if you are left-handed and the right side if you are right-handed. Position the shedding device so one side with a thin metal bar is facing upwards. Loosen the nut that holds the bar in place with the Allen wrench included with your loom and move it to the left or right of your weaving. Now, begin placing heddles on every other warp thread and loop them onto the bar on the shedding device. Click here to see a video of putting a heddle on the loom When you have put on seven heddles (one on every other warp thread), secure the bar you just put heddles on (again, using the Allen wrench). Make sure that it is flush with the brass pieces on either end of the shedding device so they do not hit the wooden clips when you rotate the shedding device. At this point, make sure you have secured the shedding device to the loom by moving the brass pieces on the wooden clips over the shedding device. You may need to use a Phillips head screwdriver to keep these in place depending on the model of loom you have. Now, rotate the shedding device toward the loom so the other bar is facing upwards. Again, loosen the bar (the one on the opposite side of the shedding device from the one you just put heddles on) and put heddles on every warp thread that does not have a heddle on it (again, this will be every other heddle). When you are finished, secure the bar again. Then, place your handle through the hole on the end of the shedding device and secure it. Tighten your tension using the wing-nuts. You are now ready to weave! Check out this video to see how to change sheds using the shedding device. When the handle is in one position, you are in one shed (lifting half the warp threads) and when the handle is in the other position your are in the other shed (lifting the other half of the warp threads). Using the shedding device eliminates the need for weaving in and out of warp threads. With it, you will simply place your fiber or beads in the space between the lowered and raised warp threads, change the shed and do the same thing going in the other direction. WEAVING 15 First, you will weave in a piece of thread to act as a base for your piece. Take piece of the C-Lon Cord you used as warp, move your shedding device to open the shed in one direction and bring the thread through the open shed. Loop around the side bar (this should be on the threaded rod), change the shed and bring your thread through the piece again. Tie off with the other end of the thread around the other side bar. At this point make sure the warp threads at the bottom of your piece and those at the top of your piece are even and the piece is the same width throughout. Next, you will weave a header. Take a length of the C-Lon Cord you used as warp (about a wingspan’s length). Put your shedding device in one position. You always want to make sure the tail of your threads face the back of the loom. Depending on the shed you are in and whether the last warp thread is raised or lowered, you may have to make what is called a pigtail to have your thread face the back of the loom. To do that, take your thread that is facing forward and loop it around the edge warp thread so it faces backward. Next bring your thread through the space in between the raised and lowered warp threads. Then, change your shed (by moving the position of the shedding device) and bring your thread back the other way. Continue doing this. Be careful not to pull too tightly when you move your weft across, but also do not leave any space between where the weft turns and the warp. Weave this header for about ten passes. End your thread in the middle of the piece and tuck it behind the warp threads. With this piece, weaving without a plan tends to work very well. As long as your colors go well together (if you have a kit from us, they will), you can really decide what you want to do as you go along. You may, however, want to plan your piece a little more and decide, for example, you’ll put beads every inch or that you want to focus on certain colors or textures. You can follow our design closely, or once you’ve gotten the hang of it, stray a bit and do your own thing. Your piece will have to be SEVEN inches long to fit on the one inch cuff. That might seem a tad too long, but when you take your piece off the loom it will shrink slightly and we have found that seven inches is the perfect length. Having it a tad long is way better than not having it be long enough. Trust me! We had you end your header in the middle of a row by tucking the end behind the warp. For tapestry, this is all you need to do to end a thread. We don’t really care what the back of the tapestry looks like. It is usually easier to start and end threads in the middle of a piece. But sometimes when you are, for example, ending a single thread and starting a double thread, ending at the selvedges is a better idea. Sometimes, though, you will want to start and end threads on the selvedges of your piece. If the shed is in one direction (as you saw when you wove your header), this will work fine and your thread will face the back of the piece naturally. When in the other shed, however, your thread will face forward. To fix this, you will need to make a pigtail. We will show you plenty of that farther on. To start a thread in the middle, tuck the beginning of the thread in the same place you tucked the end of the old one and continue weaving as if you are weaving with the old thread. Before we weave in our first row of beads, we want to weave a few rows of fiber. Do this just as you wove your header, making sure to change the shed between each pass of fiber. Note that the loop at the selvedge (edge) is neither baggy or so tight that it pulls in. All your selvedge threads should look like this. Now that you know the basics of how to weave fiber, we’re going to focus on how to add beads to your piece. First, take your sewing needle and thread a few inches of C-Lon size D beading thread (not the cord you used before). Then, tie the ends of the thread together in an over-hand knot making a loop on the needle. I suggest an over-hand knot because you will be using this set up more than several times and a square knot will want to undo itself. Make sure you have a long enough length of a thin weft thread (like the silk) on your loom to weave a few passes. Take the tail of that thread on the loom and place it through the loop you made on the needle. Pick up 14 beads with the needle. Then, push the beads down the needle, over the loop and onto the weft thread. Now your weft thread will have 14 beads on it. Change your shed and weave through with your weft as if you were weaving normally. Your beads will have to be at least a couple of inches above the last row you’ve woven in order for them to fit into the shed. Position them evenly and push down so they fit between the warp threads on top of your last row of weaving. Change the shed again and continue to weave with just the fiber weft. Easy! Check out this short video showing how to add beads to your piece. Continue weaving a few more rows of just the silk thread. When you are ready to add a new thread, stick the end of the old thread in between and behind the warp threads and start the new one where the old one ended. Weave with the new thread for a bit. Remember, you do not have to stick with our design exactly. In fact you very well may be using entirely different materials! We’ve ended our latest thread in order to start a new one. Weave a few rows of turquoise. Technique time: Pick and pick which miraculously creates vertical stripes. You might ask why? The answer is that it takes two passes in weaving to create an actual line because one pass goes over warps 1, 3, 5 etc. and the second pass goes over warps 2, 4, 6, etc. If you alternate colors this creates vertical stripes. But don’t believe me. Try it yourself. You will need to start a new thread on top of the existing (turquoise) one. This is where the pigtail gets employed. Take the end of the new (green) thread behind the two selvedge warp threads and then stick the end through the front of the piece and between the those two threads so that it lands at the back of the piece. Weave the original thread. Notice how we’ve come around the top of the original thread before weaving the second thread. Weave the second (green thread). Keep alternating the two threads to create those really fun vertical stripes. The silk thread we are using (in the kit) is hand painted and hence the colors change. The green thread is becoming coral color. I mentioned this because I don’t want you to think I replaced it with a new color. We are moving from the pick and pick technique to a new technique called wavy lines. To do this you will instead of weaving each thread once, you will weave them twice. This creates the appearance of wavy lines. Weave one more pass with the thread you just wove. Weave the other thread twice. Weave the other thread. Continue with this pattern of weaving each thread twice for a bit. We’ve ended one of our threads by making a pigtail so that the end of the thread does not land on the front of the weaving. Weave the remaining thread once. Thread fourteen beads and weave them. Start a new thread where it ended. Weave a few passes of that thread and then end it in the middle of the weaving. Add to that piece some novelty yarn. Because we’ve begun ours where the selvedge thread is lowered, we needed to make a pigtail. Weave with the silk and novelty thread for a bit. You will love the texture and the way those bits of color in the novelty thread fall between each other as you weave. Cut off your novelty thread and leave the silk thread. Weave with just the silk thread. Get ready for some new techniques! We’ve replaced our thread with a new color. Weave that for a bit in preparation for adding an additional thread to show you how to weave threads in opposite directions as well as demonstrating slit tapestry. When your threads are woven in opposite directions in any given shed you will be able to do some very magical things with them. Just trust me on this. For now we are just going to weave a simple slit in one place. Then we will move the slit over. It will all make tons of sense. Just follow these directions exactly! Change sheds, and weave a new thread at the opposite selvedge from where the working end of the other thread emerges. Change sheds and weave the two threads toward one another. As you continue with this technique you will see the slit that appears between the two colors. Weave the threads away from one another leaving a slit in between. Make those interior wraps around warps as neat as if they were at the selvedges: not too tight; not too baggy. This is fun! Weave one thread into the other thread’s space. Keep weaving this pattern, forming a new slit join in a different place. This gives you a hint as to how shapes are built in tapestry (just one of many exciting techniques!). Weave both threads back to the selvedges, again leaving Here we are ending one of the threads. Again, use that pigtail if you need to. Throw in some beads. If you don’t like the look of the beads, you can leave them out. One of the things they do is if your warp threads are getting out of alignment or you have been pulling in a tad at the selvedges, they will even things out since the space between the warp threads is exactly the space those 8/0 beads fill. Weave the existing thread. Weave an empty thread. Weave that thread for a few passes and end in the middle of the piece. If you’ve been following our piece exactly you will now have woven about three inches. Replace existing thread with a new one. Weave a pass with the new thread. Insert a new thread on the opposite side as you did before. Our next technique: warp interlock, called that because the two threads when they meet will not form a slit, but will wrap around the same warp thread. Do this pattern a few times. Note the piling up of threads on that warp. If you continue with this pattern for too long you will create a ridge in that place. Which is why slit tapestry is better for longer vertical lines. The next technique is shading. Move one thread into the other guy’s space. In our example we are wrapping around the same warp where they meet but you actually employ slit tapestry as well. It’s your choice. Now move the place where they threads meet to a different spot. Just follow the pictures! In preparation for adding a third weft weave the two wefts toward one another. Time to add a third color. This will change your view of tapestry weaving. I call this weft dancing when you have several or more weft threads playing together. It has always been my go-to favorite technique. Change the shed (this should be implied, but might be a bit confusing in this case). Insert a new color on the selvedge and weave in over part of the existing thread. Weave all the threads again, making sure not to cover the working end of any thread. See below photograph. Can you see how all these weft threads can dance together and how they are all actually going in opposite directions when in the same shed. Keep playing with your three colors. End the two colors on the left. Weave the remaining color to cover the two you just ended. Add some beads. Pour a cup of tea/coffee or a glass of wine depending on the time of day and sit back and admire your beautiful work! Add a strand of novelty yarn to your silk and weave with that. For a little fun, replace just the silk thread with a different color. Weave a few rows of novelty yarn and silk. Weave the new color with the novelty yarn. Replace the novelty yarn with a strand of silk yarn. Weave a few rows of two silk threads and then get ready for Soumak knotting. This is not a weaving technique since you are not taking your weft thread under and over the warp threads. Rather, you are wrapping around the threads. It’s a much slower technique that adds some really nice texture to your piece. It also makes the piece more durable which was useful when such weavings were used for, let’s say, saddle bags for your camel. Take your double threads behind two warp threads and to the front of the weaving. Insert the the thread between the two side warps and bring it behind two warps and to the front of the weaving. Continue with this pattern taking the thread behind two warps and then through those two warps Head back in the other direction by first inserting your thread through the two side warps. Take your thread behind warps two and three and continue making knots in this manner. Weave the two threads on top of the Soumak. Weave a few rows of the double weft threads. End your double thread and start a new one with silk and novelty yarn. To advance your weaving, trim the bottom two threads that you used as a base for your weaving. Pull up on the warping bar to advance the weaving. Turn the wing nuts clockwise to release the tension. Turn the wing nuts counter clockwise to increase the tension. Then you can continue to weave! Repeat techniques already learned until the weaving reaches seven inches. Then weave a header with warp thread as you did when you started the piece. Release the tension on your loom by turning the wing nuts clockwise. Remove the warping bar. Cut the string on the right side of the loom if you have one there. FINISHING It’s easy to finish this piece by mounting it on a brass cuff. 55 Lay your piece flat and admire it! Trim the loops at either end leaving at least four inches so you can tie overhand knots (they are tricky to tie when too short). Place a heavy object on one end of your piece to get ready to tie overhand knots. We happened to have this handy empty water glass nearby. 56 Tie the first half of a square knot with two warp ends (the first step when tying your shoe laces). Pull it snuggly against edge of piece. Tie an overhand knot. Do this by making a loop with the two warp threads and then sticking the end through the loop. 57 Before you tighten that knot, stick a needle in it and guide it to the base of the weaving. This will allow you to land that knot in exactly the right spot. 58 Do the same with the warp ends on the opposite side to keep the header from falling out. Tie off all the other warp threads. Since you have an odd number, one of those bunches will contain three warp threads. Trim the ends to about a third to a half of an inch. 59 Once your ends are trimmed, they will be all neat and pretty and ready to be tucked under. Trim the weft threads on the back of the piece. You want them out of the way but not so short that they wander through to the front of the piece. However, you will be using glue to keep them from going astray. This is how the back of your piece should look. 60 Wrap your woven piece around the cuff to see how much extra you have on the ends. You will be folding the knots and the header to the back of the piece. You want only the actual weaving to show on the edges. You need enough so that the weaving extends beyond the end of the cuff by about a quarter of a inch. Whip out your cute little tube of glue and place a thin line of it on the back of the header. Fold the header toward the back of the weaving. You might want to put a weight on it once you’ve done the other header while the glue sets. 61 Place your woven piece on the ultra-suede and cut the ultra-suede so it is the same size as the weaving. I used chalk to trace the piece to make it easier to cut. And then I retraced the line using a ruler to make it straight. 62 Place the tapestry piece and ultra-suede together to make sure they are the same size. Next glue down your stray weft ends, pushing them toward the middle of the piece so that the don’t get in the way when you are attaching it to the cuff. Place the tapestry on the cuff. The glue is also intended to keep the tapestry attached to the cuff while you sew it to the ultra-suede. 63 Put dabs of glue on the ultra-suede. Place the ultra-suede on the inside of the cuff. Trim the ends of the ultra-suede to so that it is the same length as the tapestry. 64 Thread some C-Lon thread into a needle. Bury the end knot between the tapestry and the cuff and start sewing the ultra-suede and tapestry together. 65 This is what that should look like! At this point you can call it a day. Your stitches might be so neat that you don’t want to cover them with beads. It’s your choice. But next I will show you how to add a bead edge. 66 Start a new thread. String three 11/0 beads and start sewing around the seams with the beads to make the edges pretty. Once you’ve beaded around all the edges, you’re done! 67 68