Posted in recycling, weaving

Button Loom

When thinking about all things fiber, I occasionally ponder the role of objects associated with fiber. Buttons come to mind very quickly. Who doesn’t have a handful (or jarful) of these tiny essentials? While they are often mundane adjuncts to your cardigans, coats and jeans, is it possible for buttons to step out of the ordinary? Let’s make something that gives them a stellar role. I am designing and building a button loom. This loom won’t handle the work of any serious weaver. But it can hold the warp threads for a modest tapestry. If positioned artistically, the buttons can become a key design element of the finished object.

Among my collection, I have two dozen metal shank buttons that were saved from various worn-out blazers and jackets.

The pretty silver ones came from my mom’s stash of vintage buttons.

If I sew them very close together on sturdy upholstery fabric, and then wrap the fabric around a wooden frame, it could start to become a loom.

The button-covered fabric rectangles were wrapped around the short sides of the black frame and stapled in place. I used the glue to prevent fraying.

Here is my finished frame with warp threads in place. I have used cotton and acrylic yarns for the warp, pulling and tying them together at the lower edge of frame.

Next time I will weave the tapestry.

Posted in recycling, weaving

Boho Basket

I’m staring at this really ugly wire basket which has been pressed into use in my studio. You may know the kind – available through Container Store. While it is commodious, it isn’t pretty.

Poking around in my linen closet, I identified several cotton woven placemats that are refugees from the eighties. We really liked these colors back then – peach, mint green, mauve and pale blue. They haven’t seen the light of day since I moved them sixteen years ago to our present home.

IT’S TIME TO RECYCLE!

I decided that the wire which ran the length of the basket would be the warp, and the cut-up placemats will be the weft. The opening between wires are 1 and 1/4 inch.

I cut up the placemats parallel to the warp, and across the weft. It is my hope that the full-length warp threads will keep the strips from fraying. I sewed two strips together so that they stretch down both sides and across the bottom of the basket. Here is the color sequence that I settled on:

After a bit of sewing and weaving, my new Boho-style basket is finished. Here it is, put into service holding yarn:

I like this . And it feels good to re-cycle stuff that’s just taking up space in a closet. However, I must admit to you, dear reader, that this project produced a bunch of lint!

Posted in weaving

Weaving with paper

I first learned about paper weaving when I was creating lesson plans for my fiber arts students. I teach a class of home-school students every Friday. We explore lots of fibery things, including weaving. Paper is an excellent medium for a beginning weaver. It’s abundant, cheap, and easy to manipulate. The students worked with colored craft paper, but I like using magazine clippings and photographs.

I came up with an idea of weaving together photographs and letters. The photo could be of the sender or the recipient. I imagined that the photo would increase the sentiment of my words. For this project, I decided to write a letter to my daughter. Here are my warp and weft paper pieces:

Here are the papers after weaving: Use tape to secure the paper strips on the back and a glue stick for loose bits of paper under the front edges.

Be sure to weave around the faces. It’s also good to show the hands.

To go with the color scheme of pink and blue, I chose a blue felt-tipped pen.

Finished Letter

I think this was a successful experiment. Now I need to find a super big envelope!