
Weaving
Weaving requires two different threads - the warp and the weft. The warp is long and strung from the
front to the back of the loom; the weft is laid from side to side during the weaving process. Looms can be
large, several feet wide, or small enough to be placed on a table. Cloth woven on a small loom can be
sewn together to make a larger piece.
- The warp is long, runs from the front of the loom to the back, and is wound around
horizontal wooden bars at the front and back. These bars turn, to wind the warp at the front end or
unwind the warp at the back, by using a simple notched grip attached to the ends of the bars.

- The warp is strung by winding a continuous thread around pegs on a warp frame.
Wind the thread back and forth several times, creating several warp threads at one time, and then grip the
bunch on both ends and transfer the warp lengths to the loom frame. This is done repeatedly
until the warp is as wide as the loom or as wide as desired. Make the warp as long as possible, as the very
front and back of the warp can never be woven and become waste or fringe.

- The warp threads on the loom are threaded through heddles, which are also made of
string or thread. A heddle is in essence a small string loop inside a larger string loop, with the small loop
in the middle to hold a warp thread so it can be raised or lowered during the weaving process. The
heddles are made on a heddle frame composed of three nails on a board, the top loop tied above
the middle nail, then below the middle nail, then below the bottom nail.

- The warp threads are strung through the heddles in the two heddle racks so that the odd warp
threads go through the heddles on one rack, and the even warp threads go through the heddles on the
second rack. Then, by pressing one tread or the other, the warp threads are raised and lowered
by a pulley action, creating a criss-cross that secures the weft threads passed back and forth
across the warp.

- The weft threads are wound onto a bobbin, a metal rod, that is passed back and forth
across the warp threads inside a shuttle, as though they were sailing across the warp threads
inside a tiny boat. The shuttle is a size that can be held in the hand, longer than wide, and the wood is
smoothed to avoid snagging during the weaving process. The shuttle has a rectangle cut from the center
where the filled bobbin is placed. The metal rod of the bobbin is held in place by notches at the ends of
this hole. A slit is cut at the side where the weft threads unwind.

- After the shuttle is passed and the weft thread pulled so there is no slack, the beater
bar is pulled forward to tap the weft snug against the criss-cross of the warp threads. Then the
beater bar is dropped back, away from the weaver, and the warp threads reversed by the heddle pulley
action controlled by the foot treads. The beater bar has a thin wire or reed to go between each warp
thread, and is not used with force but a gentle tapping action.

- Different patterns can be woven into the material by alternating colors in the warp
thread and using a number of shuttles - a checkerboard by alternating groups of red and white warp
threads and also alternating groups red and white weft threads. The edge of the material should be kept
trim, so the material won't unravel, and when the material is removed from the loom the warp threads are
tied on both ends and can be left as a fringe or woven back into the material with a needle to secure
them.

Authored by Nancy.
