No Trapezoidal Tapestries

When you see that you are near the end of the tapestry, the temptation is to hurry up and finish. I have done that before, unfortunately. When I rush, the first thing to go is adequate bubbling of the weft. The consequence is distortion because of draw-in. It is most noticeable after the tapestry is off the loom and looks more like a trapezoid than a rectangle.

Pictorial tapestry based on a simple watercolor and ink sketch.
I can see the end of the cartoon under the warp. There is still plenty to weave, but there is less detail in the image going forward.

Ending well is as important as beginning well. So, even though I can see the end of the Figs and Coffee cartoon under the warp, I am deliberately slowing my pace to stay attentive to the sweetly-satisfying technicalities that make a good tapestry. When this cloth beam is unrolled, I will be able to say, “I gave it my best.” And I enjoyed every minute of it!

May you have pleasant endings.

Here’s a link to last week’s post, in case you missed it: Glimåkra Standard by the Front Door.

All my best,
Karen

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