Dressing the loom with two sets of lease sticks keeps me on my toes. It means I am thinking carefully as I transfer lease sticks from in front of the reed to behind the reed. And, after beaming the warp(s), it means I am counting carefully as I put ends into threading groups of 48 threads each—32 ends of 20/2 cotton, and 16 ends of 22/2 cottolin.
I group ends together before threading. Then, when threading, if there is a discrepancy in the number of ends, it alerts me to find a threading error. Counting out these delicate unbleached cotton threads is challenge enough. Having the layer of cream cottolin threads underneath presents additional complexity. With all these ends, this part of the process is tedious. Still, it’s worth it if it lessens my chance of making threading errors with these 1,472 ends.
One step at a time.
May you enjoy the process you are in.
Happy Loom Dressing, Karen
5 thoughts on “Process Review: Threading Preparation and Two Pairs of Lease Sticks”
this is going to be beautiful. why do you have 2 sets of lease sticks? and how do you put the second one in? i put my warp on the same way you do i believe, the vavstuga way. but i only put 1 set of lease sticks in.
Hi Ellen, I have two sets of lease sticks because I wound the thinner threads (20/2 cotton) and the thicker threads (22/2 cottolin) separately. Essentially, two warps are going on the loom together. The lease sticks are inserted as usual in each warp, just before I pre-sley the reed. A couple reasons for putting it on as two warps: 1. I didn’t have to cut and tie every few threads when winding the warp, since there is one cottolin thread between every two cotton threads. 2. By winding like threads together, I am supposing that my warp tension will be more even than if I had mixed the two weights of thread in a single warp.
Good morning Karen,
Basis my carpet warp weaving perspective let’s see if I understand warping in two different sizes of very fine warps.
Pre-sleighing the reed from front to back onto the loom introduces a consistency to both organization but also in tension as this keeps the individual warps at it’s own tension. This allows the warps’ fell (sewing term used to describe the takup of a fabric as it turns into a seam) the different ease required by the different threads.
Relying on my memory. This loom is being warped up to weave a project similar to seersucker once completed?
Wow. The detail.
In the past I’ve referred to detailed projects as eating an elephant. One bite at a time.
Hi Nannette, It looks like you have a good grasp of what’s going on here. Even though the threads are pre-sleyed from the front toward the back, I wouldn’t want to confuse that with the warping process that I use, which is normally described as back to front.
The project I am following from Väv Magazine calls this cloth “crinkly.” So, yes, I’m hoping for a seersucker-type result. We shall see…..! The prospect is exciting.
this is going to be beautiful. why do you have 2 sets of lease sticks? and how do you put the second one in? i put my warp on the same way you do i believe, the vavstuga way. but i only put 1 set of lease sticks in.
Hi Ellen, I have two sets of lease sticks because I wound the thinner threads (20/2 cotton) and the thicker threads (22/2 cottolin) separately. Essentially, two warps are going on the loom together. The lease sticks are inserted as usual in each warp, just before I pre-sley the reed. A couple reasons for putting it on as two warps: 1. I didn’t have to cut and tie every few threads when winding the warp, since there is one cottolin thread between every two cotton threads. 2. By winding like threads together, I am supposing that my warp tension will be more even than if I had mixed the two weights of thread in a single warp.
Thanks for asking,
Karen
Yes I had the same question!
Good morning Karen,
Basis my carpet warp weaving perspective let’s see if I understand warping in two different sizes of very fine warps.
Pre-sleighing the reed from front to back onto the loom introduces a consistency to both organization but also in tension as this keeps the individual warps at it’s own tension. This allows the warps’ fell (sewing term used to describe the takup of a fabric as it turns into a seam) the different ease required by the different threads.
Relying on my memory. This loom is being warped up to weave a project similar to seersucker once completed?
Wow. The detail.
In the past I’ve referred to detailed projects as eating an elephant. One bite at a time.
Thank you for sharing.
Nannette
Hi Nannette, It looks like you have a good grasp of what’s going on here. Even though the threads are pre-sleyed from the front toward the back, I wouldn’t want to confuse that with the warping process that I use, which is normally described as back to front.
The project I am following from Väv Magazine calls this cloth “crinkly.” So, yes, I’m hoping for a seersucker-type result. We shall see…..! The prospect is exciting.
Karen