Search
  • Information
    • About
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
  • Blog
  • Subscribe
  • Tutorials
    • Tutorials
    • Doll Clothes: Photos and some Patterns
  • Suggested Reading
  • Quilts: My Original Designs
  • Gallery: Color Studies
  • Gallery: Quilts I've Made
  • Doll Making Blog Posts
  • Recent blog posts
  • Quilts Based on The Improv Handbook for Modern Quilters
Close
Menu
Search
Close
  • Information
    • About
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
  • Blog
  • Subscribe
  • Tutorials
    • Tutorials
    • Doll Clothes: Photos and some Patterns
  • Suggested Reading
  • Quilts: My Original Designs
  • Gallery: Color Studies
  • Gallery: Quilts I've Made
  • Doll Making Blog Posts
  • Recent blog posts
  • Quilts Based on The Improv Handbook for Modern Quilters
Menu

Sleeping Dog Quilts

SLEEPING DOG QUILTS

April 25, 2019

Book Review: "In Celebration of Plain Weave" by Annie MacHale

by Judy Tucker


Rainbow striped book marker and peg gnome

Rainbow striped book marker and peg gnome

Rainbow striped book marker and peg gnome

Rainbow striped book marker and peg gnome

I’ve been following Annie MacHale, @aspinnerweaver, on Instagram for a while now. She weaves bands on an inkle loom and sells guitar straps, key chains and other items that use woven bands.

She recently published a book on plain weaving, the simplest weave done with an inkle loom. But simple doesn’t mean plain or dull. The options for pattern and color variations are endless. Her book is In Celebration of Plain Weave: Color and Design Inspiration for Inkle Weavers.

Book cover

Book cover

The first 32 pages of the book are all about color theory. She discusses how to mix colors and use of available on-line tools for picking and previewing color combinations. Her discussion of color theory is excellent—easy to understand and fun to read with the great accompanying photos.

The second part of the book defines the basic pattern elements that can be woven using plain weave. She talks about how to combine the elements to design a pattern for weaving a band.

The main part of the book has 200 plain weave designs that can be used to weave bands on an inkle loom. She has patterns using 39 to 79 warp threads, so narrow to wide bands. All of the patterns are in full color. You can weave them in her colors but of course you can totally change the colors too. The last part of the book discusses how to change the patterns.

What a great resource! When I first got my inkle loom, I was all excited and learned how to do a variety of bands using complex patterns using a variety of heddles. But when I picked up the loom again last year, I’d forgotten how to do the more complex weaving and my bands were a sorry sight! I’d already decided to go back to basics and work in plain weave for a while when I saw Annie post about her new book. It was perfect timing for me.

At the top is a little book mark that was the first thing I wove after purchasing the book. I misread the pattern so it isn’t exactly any of the patterns in the book. But the band on the inkle loom below, is Pattern #51 from the book, but woven with my own colorway.

Pattern #51 from “In Celebration of Plain Weave” on the inkle loom.  (Has Cloudberry been weaving at night?)

Pattern #51 from “In Celebration of Plain Weave” on the inkle loom. (Has Cloudberry been weaving at night?)

I highly recommend this book if you weave bands on an inkle loom or if you are just thinking about whether or not you want to purchase a loom or aren’t sure what you can do if you get a loom.

(About the gnomes that photo-bombed the pictures in this post. The Waldorf type doll at the loom is Cloudberry, and the peg doll above is one of the Winter Gnomes. The Winter Gnomes have been at their off-season spring convention. More to follow about that in another post)!

Notice: This blog is not monetized: I do not use affiliate links. When there are links in a post, they are to give credit to another creative person, because I like or have used a product, or to help the reader easily find supplies for a project.




TAGS: "In Celebration of Plain Weave" by Annie MacHale, Inkle loom, patterns for weaving inkle bands, Book Review, weaving on an inkle loom, Color theory


February 22, 2018

Dusting off the Inkle Loom

by Judy Tucker


Band weaving with Baltic pattern, red wool and cottolin

Band weaving with Baltic pattern, red wool and cottolin

Band weaving with Baltic pattern, red wool and cottolin

Band weaving with Baltic pattern, red wool and cottolin

My inkle loom has been gathering dust. Literally!  The band shown above had been on the loom for a long time. I warped the band on two different days and accidentally used two different weights of cottolin thread. I left the warp, but wasn't really happy doing the weaving. 

A couple of weeks ago, I decided just to cut it off and start something new. Because the band was dusty, I washed it. And of course, now I love it!  The band isn't very long but it looks great as a belt on this "Winter Outfit" made by the ladies at Bamboletta for this Bamboletta Sitting Friend doll!

Wool and Cottolin woven belt on a doll and doll outfit made by Bamboletta.com

Wool and Cottolin woven belt on a doll and doll outfit made by Bamboletta.com

I have a new warp on the inkle loom now, doing a simple pink and white cotton band, just to get my hand back into the feel of weaving again. 

Wait...could that be an Inkle on the back of the loom? (No one is quite sure what an Inkle is, so why not??  He's actually trial of a new little soft doll I'm designing).

IMG_6334.JPG
IMG_6335.JPG

I think this pink and white band will make a lovely trim for a doll dress! Using my bands on doll dress could become a thing!!

TAGS: Inkle loom, Band loom, Band weaving, Inkle bands, Waldorf type doll


February 11, 2016

Inkle Loom: I'm Learning a New Skill

by Judy Tucker


Child's cotton Valentine Belt

Child's cotton Valentine Belt

Child's cotton Valentine Belt

Child's cotton Valentine Belt

Happy Valentine's Day!

Last summer one of my friends purchased a rigid heddle loom.  I went over to her house to admire it. While we were talking I mentioned I'd always thought it would be fun to have an inkle loom.  The word "Inkle" goes back at least to the 1500s but the origin of the word is unknown. An Inkle is a linen tape used for laces and for trimming on clothing.  An inkle loom is used today to weave narrow bands--shoelaces to guitar bands and to make bands to decorate shirts and sweaters. The idea of weaving something that could be done fairly quickly is really appealing to me.

Several of us went out for breakfast to celebrate my birthday a couple months ago. In comes one friend carrying a big, long box. My friends had gone in together and got me a Schacht inkle loom!  These are great friends!!

Inkle loom with a warp, ready to start weaving

Inkle loom with a warp, ready to start weaving

I'd done a little bit of simple tapestry weaving as a child so I had a very basic understanding about weaving.  I watched several YouTube videos and got several great books. Despite my childhood experience it was like learning a new language! 

But these are bands, not blankets, so I set up the loom and gave it a try. I learned a lot weaving that first band. It started out way too loose (a common problem for beginners), ended up too tight and has lumpy selvages. But I was beginning to have feel for weaving a narrow band.  Each subsequent band shows improvement.

Weaving first inkle.jpg
Weaving Christmas Inkle 2nd attempt.jpg
Weaving Blue-teal band and Blue Baltic.jpg

Left to right:  My first attempt, my second band (still having selvage problems), my third band (a bit better) and my first Baltic pick-up weave.

The Valentine design at the top is my most recent band. It is a Baltic weave pattern. I used the band to make a child's belt and a couple of bookmarks.  All the designs shown here are from the book, The Weaver's Inkle Pattern Directory by Anne Dixon.

Plain weave is fun and fast!  The decisions about design are all made when the loom is warped. But I'm particularly drawn to pick-up patterns where the design is created by picking up specific threads from the warp as each row is woven. Pick-up weaving is a lot slower and requires full attention but I love the results.  In the photo of the blue band at the far right above you can see that both sides of the band have a pattern.

In my next post I'll share some of the books that I've found very helpful learning to band weave.

 

TAGS: Inkle loom, Inkle bands, Baltic weaving, The Weaver's Inkle Pattern Directory, Band weaving, Pick-up band weaving


Powered by Squarespace 7