More Krokbragd
This is as far as I sampled Krokbragd on the Wonder Weave. I didn't want to stress the old plastic, and I was just learning the basics. Now I'm going to try a larger sample on the Kessenich two harness table loom.
This is as far as I sampled Krokbragd on the Wonder Weave. I didn't want to stress the old plastic, and I was just learning the basics. Now I'm going to try a larger sample on the Kessenich two harness table loom.
I'm learning to weave Norwegian Krokbragd as Jane Patrick teaches in The Weaver's Idea Book. My first attempt is on the small but mighty Wonder Weave.
Like many new weavers, I've always wanted to try twill on my rigid heddle loom, but if you're like me and have been brave enough to read about using double heddles, special warping, and lifting the heddles in a particular sequence, you may be exactly like me and put it off for another time. This morning, I wondered how difficult it could be. Isn't weaving simply raising and lowering threads and sending another thread over, around, under? Isn't it a fairly simple process to create a fairly simple piece of fabric? If my (extremely simplified) theory would hold water, could it be that twill is (gasp!) simple?
I dug out my little Wonder Weave loom and looked up twill online. I found a very simple pattern on Wikipedia, and started weaving 2 by 2 twill with a needle and yarn. It looked bad, but I could see a pattern emerging:
I then warped my Knitting Board (10"). I had purchased the AKB extenders which turn the knitting board into a frame loom for simple weaving projects. I used the identical pattern from the Wonder Weave, and after just a few inches, the diagonal weave of the twill jumped right out at me:
Basically, the pattern is two over, two under. To get the twill, your second pass will begin with a "one over, two under" then continue with the 2×2 pattern.
Here is a link to the image I used when weaving this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:22twillsm.png.
Experimenting is the spice of life. Now if I could just finish one of those projects on my "big" looms.
It's amazing. A few years ago, we made a little video of a tiny loom I found in a thrift store. And because there are crazy crafters out there just like me, it's now numbering 107,000 views and counting.
For the record, I've made only a handful of items with this loom, but I do believe using it taught me the basics of weaving.