Since knitting is still very tiring for my right hand. Not to mention that it is hard to knit more than a few rows a day. Also I should not be spinning tons of new yarn just to sit in bags on my shelves. I decided to try a bit of weaving.
Why weaving you might ask. Well for one thing I use 2.5 times more yarn in a weaving project than a similar knitting or crochet project. That is a very good thing right now, since the new winter shawl that I started in January still has one skein more of yarn to go before it is finished. Another reason is that it is now April 10th and I have not completed one project this year. Yes, you have read that right, nada, not one completed project has been completed for 2023. Yes, I am giving my hand time to heal after multiple surgeries in January and February on my right hand. Yes, I am making very slow progress. Also the older I get the longer it takes to heal.
Well the news isn’t all that bad. Since I have brought the looms, yes plural looms out last week, I have almost completed one scarf. It took 2 1/2 skeins of yarn. I took it off the smaller loom last night. I gave it its hot water bath this morning. With the temperatures in Tucson in the low 90’s it should be dry by sometime tomorrow. Then I can do the finishing touches on it.
On the larger loom I have a cotton open weave shawl going in a variegated yarn. This is my first attempt at open weaving. The first few inches look fantastic. I can’t wait to see what design the yarn will make. A 2nd scarf was started on the smaller loom tonight. I am using up a bunch of bulky yarn on a 5 dent heddle. In English that translates to 5 warp threads per inch. Where the shawl is a much denser 12 warp threads per inch. A huge difference in the time it takes to warp the loom., not to mention the time it takes to weave each piece. It took 4 hours to warp the shawl and less than 30 minutes for the scarf.
So without further ado here is an almost side by side of both looms. With a picture of the open weaving too. The bottom of the open weave will be straighter once it is taken off the loom