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![]() Schacht Inkle Loom & Shuttle |
Inkle Looms Schacht Open sided heavy-duty loom with an easy-grip tension bar. Will weave up to 4-1/2" wide and 8-1/2 feet long. Maple with a hand-rubbed oil finish. $75.95 ppd. Order shuttle separately. $8.75ppd. Beka Maple, open-sided table model will weave bands up to 4" wide, 6-9 feet long. One belt shuttle included. $59.95 |
ASHFORD BOOK OF RIGID HEDDLE WEAVING (Rowena Hart) $25.50 bk005U
The rigid heddle loom is a simple, two-shaft loom which
is excellent for learning and building a base for more complex
weaving. This colorful book guides the new weaver through its
many techniques, showing just how easy it is to make your woven
creations come alive through color and texture. It's filled with
color photos, showing the how-to and this-is-what-happens of weaves
and patterns, wool locks and yarns. An exceptional book! Recommended
book for all rigid heddle weavers! 75pgs.
ASHFORD BOOK OF TEXTURES & TOWELS FOR THE FOUR SHAFT LOOM (Elsa Krogh) $12.25 bk004f Towels are wonderful projects for the loom. You can weave small fingertip towels or large bath towels, thin dishtowels for the kitchen or bulky towels for the bathroom They are all useful and they make excellent gifts. For beginners there is consolation that a towel will do its job even if the weaving is slightly irregular and the edges not quite straight. For advanced weavers, weaving towels is an excellent way to test unusual color combinations, new yarns, and interesting techniques. In addition, a towel warp can be used for more than towels: make placemats, cushions, bags, and use up odds and ends of nice yarns and gorgeous colors. 32pgs.
FINISHING TOUCHES FOR THE HANDWEAVER (Virginia West) $22.95 bk069U "Certainly the hours of thought and effort involved in every little miracle of handwoven fibers warrant just a bit more time spent to complete an article with just the right finishing touch." Since it's publication over thirty years ago, Finishing Touches has been like a helping hand to weavers everywhere. Includes hemstitching, ways to secure fringe, decorative fringes, weaving fringes on the loom, details for bags, joining widths of handwoven materials, embroidery techniques as finishing touches. 96 pgs.
A HANDBOOK OF WEAVES 1875 Illustrations (G.H. Oelsner) $17.50 bk187D This 1915 reprint is a fully-indexed reference, a how-to book, and a storehouse of unusual information and practical suggestions. Covers from simple draft and plain weave to complicated fancy weaves, with text and 1875 working diagrams. A few of the many weaves fully explained, differentiated and illustrated in this volume are: irregular, double-stitched, and filling satins; basket and rib weaves; steep, undulating, broken, offset, corkscrew, interlocking , herringbone, and fancy twills; honeycomb and lace weaves; tricot and matelasse weaves; corded, pique, and kersey weaves; and literally hundreds more. There are 45 pages on crepe weaves alone. There is a section showing, with text and pictures, how one may obtain from a simple swatch of material, the full details of construction and layout of any fabric made: weave and color patterns, number of threads per square inch, weight of cloth, sizes of warp yarn and filling yarn, etc. A very in-depth reference. 402pgs.
A HANDWEAVER'S PATTERN BOOK (Marguerite Davison) $40.00 This is THE pattern book for 4-harness weaving. Contains 345 threading directions ranging from simple twills to complicated techniques. These are illustrated with over 1200 weavings. Directions are set down in a simple diagram. Hardcover. 240 pgs.
HANDS ON RIGID HEDDLE WEAVING (Davenport) $20.25 This book is devoted entirely to the rigid heddle, from learning about the loom to equipment, yarn, and wonderful patterns and everything you need to know to make them. The rigid heddle loom is efficient, but still simple enough that you can see exactly what's happening as you weave. It is easy and fast to set up and is very portable: you can take it traveling or to workshops. The rigid heddle loom is appealing to beginning weavers, who can get started with a small investment and not find they've outgrown their equipment as soon as they get the hang of it, as well as to experienced weavers who value its thriftiness and versatility. 120 pgs.
HANDWOVEN'S DESIGN
COLLECTION (Interweave Press )
These collections of weaving projects have complete, easy-to-follow
instructions with colorful photos. Target your interest!
#4 - $5.00 Outwear (16 coats, jackets, sweaters, scarves)
#7 - $5.00 Simple Styles (clothing - jackets, vests, shirts
- made with rectangles with minimal construction)
#13 - $5.00 Super Simple Tops (15 easy-to-weave tops, blouses,
and a vest for all seasons)
#14 - $5.00 Weaving for Baby (blankets & wee garments)
#17 - $6.00 Jackets & Pullovers (from casual cotton tops to
sophisticated silk/wool-blend jackets)
#18 - $11.25 A Treasury of Towels (15 projects from kitchen to
bath in a variety of weaves; 32pgs)
#19 - $11.25 Scarves & Shawls (15 projects, glorious colors,
intriguing weave structures, soft /silky/wooly; 32pgs)
#20 - $11.25 Weekend Weaving Projects (quick projects, from totes
to tablecloths; 32pgs)
HANDWOVEN MAGAZINE (Interweave Press ) $7.99 ma004 Published five times a year for more than 20 years, Handwoven is a weaver's constant companion. More than a collection of enticing projects - it's a weaver's address book, family album, journal, and "Dear Abby." It's a textile travelogue, pattern book, show catalog, weave structure textbook, a resource for filling shelves with yarns and books and interesting tools, a place to meet new teachers and friends, discover new patterns, learn to create original designs, plan weaving trips, and find solutions to weaving challenges. It's where weavers return issue after issue. Current and back issues available. Please inquire.
HANDWOVEN SCARVES (Interweave Press) $26.50 Scarves in many shapes and sizes, imaginative color schemes, unusual fiber combinations, and striking weave structures. Scarves small and large, subtle and bold, fuzzy and smooth. From looms across the country and across the world comes this collection of 50 exquisite handwoven creations. Selected by the editors at Interweave Press, each scarf is portrayed in full-page, full-color photography and is accompanied by design notes and a brief biography of the weaver. Whether you're a beginning weaver or seasoned artisan, you'll find a volume of inspiration in Handwoven Scarves.
INKLE WEAVING (Helene Bress ) $26.50 bk538U This book truly shows what the simple little inkle loom is capable of achieving. Everything from choosing a loom, to warping and learning about yarns and patterns, techniques and finishing, is presented with easy-to-follow instructions, photos and drawings. 214 pgs.
LEARN TO WEAVE ON THE RIGID HEDDLE LOOM (Ashford ) $3.50 This is the instruction booklet that comes with the Ashford rigid heddle loom. It shows an extremely easy way of putting on a warp, along with the basics of weaving to get you started. 12 pgs.
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LEARNING TO WEAVE (Chandler) $26.25 Since
its first printing a decade ago, Learning to Weave has
become the standard text both for teachers and self-taught weavers.
All you need to know to weave with confidence is here, including
information on warping, reading and designing drafts, and the
basics of weave structures. This revised edition includes a chapter
on warping back-to-front and updated resource lists. Revised,
hardcover. 232 pgs.
THE MAGIC OF HANDWEAVING:
The Basics and Beyond
(Sigrid
Piroch) $25.50 This is an extremely interesting book,
as well as a valuable how-to resource for both new and experienced
weavers. Sigrid Piroch is an experienced weaver who leads readers
on a journey through the world of cloth. She guides you through
the beginning stages of weaving, from planning and designing,
to the final stages, when the beautiful piece of cloth is ready
to take off the loom. You will learn about weavers around the
world who weave cloth out of necessity, tradition, and art. This
is a resource for all those with an interest in this amazing process,
as well as those with a desire to learn how to do it. Lots of
close-up photos and descriptions of a variety of looms, loom parts,
tools, weave structures, color patterns, and useful and colorful
projects. An exceptional book! Lots of color, 144 pgs.
MASTERING WEAVE
STRUCTURES: Transforming Ideas Into Great Cloth (Sharon Alderman) $41.75
Interweave Press says this is the most important new weaving
book they have published in almost 20 years! Sharon Alderman,
one of the finest weavers in America, has written a book that
teaches you the finer points of weave structure in the same personal
way a friend would encourage and inspire you. Clear explanations,
wonderful examples, and color photographs of stunning fabrics
introduce you to the fundamental principles of weave structure.
Beyond selecting or modifying a draft, Sharon also helps you make
decisions about choosing the fibers and yarns you need to produce
endlessly inventive fabrics. Comprehensive and detailed, the chapters
cover plain weave, twills, satin, waffle weaves, distortions of
the grid, three-element weaves, loom-controlled doubleweave, Bedford
cords and piques, loom-controlled pile weave, and crepe weaves.
This book is destined to become a new classic and should be on
every weaver's bookshelf. Hardcover, 264 pgs.
NAVAJO WEAVING WAY: The Path from Fleece to Rug (Noel Bennett & Tiana Bighorse) $23.95 Warm in tradition and clear how-to instructions, this comprehensive book covers wool, carding, spinning, dyeing, and weaving samplers and rugs. 160 pgs.
ON WEAVING (Anni Albers) $21.50 Unlike a guide or how-to book, this unabridged republication of the 1965 edition approaches weaving from a visual and structural perspective, with remarks by the author on the priciples underlying the craft's techniques and appearances. Its extensive coverage includes hand weaving, the loom, fundamental construction, draft notation, modified and composite weaves, early techniques of thread interlacing, interrelation of fiber and construction, tactile sensibility, tapestry, and design. 121 illustrations depicting tapestries. lace blankets, and cloth from around the world, 112 b&w plates, 9 color illustrations. 204 pgs.
RAG RUG HANDBOOK (Meany & Pfaff)
$23.50 This
classic book gives instructions for weaving a first rug, plus
twenty traditional two- and four-shaft patterns. Topics include:
Materials, instructions for 20 rug projects, rag preparation,
weaving and finishing hints, design, information on antique looms,
suppliers, bibliography, glossary. 127 pgs.
TAPE LOOMS: Past and Present (Bonnie Weidert) $24.50 There were no
zippers, velcro or snaps in the past, and people relied on lacing.
Tape looms are capable of making strong, long, narrow bands which
have a myriad of uses. They were used for loops on towels and
pot holders for hanging, loops at the top of bed curtains to attach
them to the tester frame of a four-poster bed, edgings on needlework,
drawstrings on cloth bags, crisscrossing over a cradle to keep
the child safe, fastenings for clothing, ties on bonnets, shoelaces,
lamp wicks - - for anything of fabric that needed tying, fastening,
pulling or hanging. In this most informative book, the author
shares her research of tape looms. She provides a pattern and
instructions for building your own tape loom. She tells you how
to set up your loom and warp it, then moves into the weaving process.
Eighteen drafts for simple patterns, which can be made on an inkle
loom as well as a tape loom, are shown in color. Includes photos
of a variety of antique looms. Spiral, lay-flat binding. 72 pgs.
TAPESTRY WEAVING (Kristen Glasbrook) $23.50 bk223U The tapestries in this book are all woven on simple rectangular frames. For those wanting to get started without a big investment, you can even use an old picture frame for a loom. Clear how-to instructions are accompanied by colorful photos. Lots of weaving information in this inspiring book.
TAPESTRY WEAVING: A Comprehensive Study Guide (Nancy Harvey) $26.50 bk 223I Nancy Harvey is one of America's best-known teachers of this exciting craft. Using the same clear step-by-step approach that makes her workshops so successful, Nancy will lead you through building a simple frame loom, to mastering the basic techniques, to completing handsome pieces based on her designs or your own. In this book , you will find: Beginning and intermediate samplers for learning the basics; Hundreds of highlighted tips for weavers of all levels of experience; Six practice designs for building skills; Ideas for coming up with your own designs, even if you "can't draw"; Over 380 illustrations and photographs. 208 pgs.
The TARTAN WEAVER'S GUIDE (James Scarlett) $18.50 bk 640u Here is useful and authentic information about tartans and tartan weaving. 142 tartans are illustrated in full color to show the rich variety achievable with the simple techniques described. The illustrations show tartans in the popular so-called 'Old' or 'Ancient' colors, which are supposed to represent the colors used by Highland weavers before the invention of synthetic dyes, and show the patterns more clearly than do the stronger 'Modern' colors, though the actual thread counts are the same. Hardcover, full color, 66pgs.
THIS IS HOW I GO WHEN I GO LIKE THIS: Weaving and Spinning as Metaphor (Linda Collier Ligon) $18.25 bk 224I A collection of provocative essays celebrating the handweaving world and 25 years of Handwoven Magazine. Paperbound with jacket. 152 pgs.
TIME TO WEAVE: Simply elegant projects to make
in almost no time (Jane Patrick) $23.50 bk 234I Turn
everyday materials like paper, sticks, and string, and unusual
materials like plastic sheeting, granite tiles, and rubberbacked
floor runners into artful projects such as coasters. mats, greeting
cards, window hangings, lamps, pillows, necklaces, and much more.
Techniques include braiding, stringing, knotting, frame-loom weaving,
straw weaving, and weaving over a pillow form. Each project focuses
on the creative process as much as the finished project and each
imbraces an appreciation for the natural world and encourages
use of reconstructed, recycled, vintage and natural materials.
You DO have time to weave! And what's more, you don't even need
a loom! Color photos, 128 pgs.
TWINED RAG RUGS: Tradition in the Making (Bobbie Irwin) $21.50 bk 585k
Beautiful, thick, and durable, twined rag rugs are easily woven
on inexpensive home-built looms. This new book introduces numerous
patterns and equipment options with step-by-step diagrams and
photos for nine samplers and ten full-size rugs. Also included
are complete instructions for building basic equipment and tips
for designing heirloom rugs. You don't need to be a "weaver"
to enjoy this simple technique; even children learn it easily.
100 illustrations, 250 color photos. 128 pgs.
WEAVERS BOOK OF
8-SHAFT PATTERNS (from
the friends of Handwoven, edited by Carol Strickler) $41.50 This
must-have draft book contains almost 1000 different patterns on
more than 25 weave structures. Introductory chapters providee
a thorough understanding of how each structure works. 240 pgs.
WEAVER'S COMPANION
(Hadwoven
Magazine) $21.50 You can't possibly remember it all, so save your
brain for being creative. This small, sturdy book is full of details.
Sett and sleying charts, warp and weft calculation formulas, finishing
techniques, fiber information, how to fix mistakes, what to do
when your loom jams, how hot should your wash water be, how to
tell if that lovely mill end is really silk ......You get the
idea! If you weave, you NEED this book. 112 pgs.
WEAVING A NAVAJO BLANKET (Tidball) $9.00 The author spent four summers living and working among the Navajos. She passes along what she learned in this book - Spinning, dyeing, equipment, designs, tensions and textures, history, patterns, symbolism. 222 pgs.
WEAVING CONTEMPORARY RAG RUGS (Heather Allen) $20.25 Weaving rag rugs is an immensely satisfying process that enables you to use cast-off remnants of fabric - and a favorite shirt or two - to make something beautiful and functional for your home. In this book, you'll explore the fascinating history of rag weaving, learn how to weave a basic rag rug, master some of the most popular traditional designs, and experiment with contemporary techniques for weaving and embellishing rugs. Filled with scores of color photographs of rugs by more than 40 artists from around the world, this book is an inspiration as well as a valuable source of information. 127 pgs.
WEAVING INKLE BANDS (Harriet Tidball) $11.00 This 40-page book takes you through all the steps of inkle weaving, including loom plans.
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WEAVING OVERSHOT: Redesigning the Tradition (Donna Lee Sullivan) $21.50 Supplies
a substantial foundation for this traditional weave structure,
from the basics of threading blocks to design techniques. More
than 100 drafts and photographs. 160 pgs.
WEAVING, SPINNING AND DYEING BOOK $46.95 (Rachel Brown) bk161G This book is big and full of information on spinning and weaving with clear step-by-step directions and illustrations. Virtually every kind of loom, from cardweaving to inexpensive primitive looms to more conventional treadle looms, is explained, some with building instructions. You'll learn about: Weaving methods and tools. Designing and finishing techniques. Spinning, from choosing a fleece through cleaning, carding, spinning on handspindles and wheels. Dyeing, with natural and synthetic dyes. Design and color. More than 50 weaving projects. Pricing your work and selling it. Sources of suppliers for everything in the book! 366 pgs.
The
guides that make weaving fun with techniques from European handweavers
and the textile industry - - -
WARPING YOUR LOOM & TYING ON NEW WARPS $41.50 (Peggy Osterkamp)
Getting started (new weavers!), Beaming on a
Plain Beam, Threading the loom & sleying the reed, Tying on,
Tying up the treadles/weaving, Sectional beaming, Tying on new
warps, Adjusting Looms, Automatic warp tension system, The warping
drum/Sectional and plain beaming, Two or more warps, Designing
random stripes, knots, Equipment/sources/yarns/index. 189 pgs.
WINDING A WARP
& USING A PADDLE
$41.50 (Peggy Osterkamp)
Weaving basics, Equipment, Making your warps
work, Your warp's path, The raddle groups, Warping, Securing the
warp, Now for the Kitestick, Putting the warp in the raddle, Using
a paddle, Sett, Planning a project, Appendix/sources/index. 134
pgs.
YOU CAN WEAVE:
Projects for Young Weavers
(Monaghan
& Joyner) $21.25 You don't have to be an expert weaver
to introduce weaving skills to children. You Can Weave
provides illustrated step-by-step projects that build a foundation
of weaving knowledge and skills. The projects rely on supplies
that are readily available, such as paper, yarn, ribbon, string,
rags, and beads. Children can learn and practice basic weaving
processes by hand and on cardboard, frame, backstrap, and other
wooden looms. The book provides easy-to-follow instructions for
building the looms and a rigid heddle. Colorful examples of woven
art throughout the book will inspire young weavers. Hardcover,
96 pgs.
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Detta's Spindle Phone 763-479-1612 Non-metro orders: 877-640-1612 e-mail: dettasspindle@yahoo.com You may order by phone, mail, or e-mail. |