• Jasmine
    • Wrap Gallery
    • Contact
    • Babywearing
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • Events
  • Search
Menu

14 Mile Farm

Street Address
Fairbanks, Alaska
Phone Number
Handweaving & Fiber Arts in Alaska

Your Custom Text Here

14 Mile Farm

  • About
    • Jasmine
    • Wrap Gallery
    • Contact
    • Babywearing
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • Events
  • Search

Fire in the Sky

April 13, 2017 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Fire in the Sky - a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

Oh my.  It has been nearly a year since I wove this warp, and now over a year since I designed it and I've yet to hit publish on its blog post!  This was my first go-round playing with the idea of the aurora borealis as inspiration.  I have another aurora warp coming up on the loom, so it seemed an auspicious time to finally get this one published.  

Fire in the Sky - a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

This warp is a dark navy blue with splashed streaks of color across it.  So many times when I see the aurora used as inspiration, the warp is a riot of (beautiful) colors.  But in the snow quiet wintertime when I step outside in the middle of the night and look up, I see the vast expanse of the dark sky held up by points of starlight and a swath of swirling curtains of ethereal color.  I wanted to mirror that relationship of vast dark sky to ribbon of color in this warp.  

Fire in the Sky - a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

The first wrap piece was woven with a black tencel weft.  The weave is a faux crackle algorithmically designed by Ralph Griswold.  The pattern of the weave reminds me of the stands of black spruce growing stunted and beautiful in the muskeg, and of the spiky patches of fireweed cropping up in meadows and roadsides.   It is visually camoflauged in this piece because the navy warp against black weft doesn't give the sort of high contrast that allows for a weave pattern to shine.  I do love the way that the interval of the pattern repeat and the random intervals of the pinstriped colors interact creating a visual effect of the ribbons of colors seeming to dance and move.

Weaving Fire in the Sky, a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

The second wrap piece had the added inspiration of a particular visionary dreamscape auroral display.  It was a really special piece to weave and it went home to the person to whom that visionary dreamscape was speaking when I witnessed it.  Such a magical experience to be able to pull that vision into cloth! 

Fire in the Sky, a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

I used cotton for the weft on this piece, in (mostly) the same colors as are in the warp and in a variety of techniques.  This piece was a total playground for me.  It was so much fun to do.  While it looks as though the weft may be hand painted, it isn't.  It is all commercial colors with the visual effect due to hand manipulated weaving techniques.  Clasped weft and alternating wefts, and alternating clasped wefts.  For most of this piece I had between two and eight shuttles going carrying different colors.  It was a totally improvisatory process, going through themes of color and technique, checking back in with the memory of that visionary dreamscape and moving into a new theme of color or technique.  

Fire in the Sky, a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

One of the things I most adore about weaving is the way that once you know what you're doing, once you know the container you're working in, you can change things up and play to your heart's content.  This was the same weave structure I had used for the prior warp, Field of Dreams, so I'd woven probably over 20 meters of this weave and had learned the structure inside and out to the point where I understood how it worked when I played with it.  In the photo below, you can see how I played with treadling to change up the visuals of the weave pattern.  This was another improvisation, like a harmony to the melody of the colorwork. 

Fire in the Sky, a handwoven baby wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

I love including cowls and fabric for making other things on my baby wrap warps.  Not everyone who follows my work is a babywearer, and the children of  even the most avid babywearer do eventually grow up and grow out of 'uppies', so I love being able to have items that can serve a purpose in the lives of those who don't wear their young children on the daily.  I wove a set of cowls on this warp featuring weft by a local dye artist Bad Sheep Yarn. 

Handwoven cowl from Fire in the Sky, a wrap inspired by the aurora borealis | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

Handweaving.net CW108265, Crackle Design Project, Ralph Griswold, United States, 2004, #13482

 Draft Credit :  Handweaving.net CW108265, Crackle Design Project, Ralph Griswold, United States, 2004, #13482

In Babywearing, Weaving, Wraps Tags aurora, aurora borealis, alaska, made in alaska, alaskan art, alaskan artist, aurora art, aurora borealis art, babywearing, babywearing wrap, northern lights, northern lights art
Comment

Subscribe!

Receive blog updates, shop news, and occasional behind the scenes love! 

I respect your privacy.

Thank you!
Join the 14 Mile Farm Community on Facebook!
Phew! What a day! Another amazing #handmademarket at @fairbanksarts in the books! Thank you so much to all the staff, the live local high school musical talent, @fairbankschildrensmuseum, @briannareagan_creates and of course to Santa! - for such a fa
This weekend’s Handmade Holiday Market at @fairbanksarts kicks off the holiday season for our family. 
Art, handcrafts, market excitement, Santa visits, kids crafts, caroling, and the tree lighting in Pioneer Park make it a favorite family even
I have a few pieces in the “Beyond the 9-5” show in the University Art Gallery which is a celebration of the creative community and inner lives of UAF faculty and staff. The opening reception is this Friday, if you’re local you shou
This is Nurture- this small collection (only two shawls) is inspired by my journey nursing my two children. While the 7300 Hours collection explores the labor involved in the feeding of young humans, this is a celebration of the tenderness, connectio
I’ll be moving these skeins (and maybe others? I need to ruthlessly sort!) into the shop inventory in advance of Fiber Fest. I have so very very many skeins of handspun tucked away, all with specific warps in mind, but the reality is that my sp
And for a bit of eye candy, here’s a few of my favorite drop spindles. Front and center is the yarn and spindle you see me starting in the tutorial: @hipstrings Peacocky spun on one of my all time favorite spindles by francesstachl. 
#dropspind
I’m two for two, posting a weekly blog post! After a few years of good intentions and little follow through, I sat down and made a spreadsheet of prior projects that don’t yet live on the blog and convinced myself that a weekly posting sc
Bordeaux by Inglenook Fibers. 

I taught the girls to knit yesterday and it has me wanting to cast on with handspun! I have plenty of skeins sitting about and waiting for a project- not this one as it found a home at a holiday market last year! - but

© 14 Mile Farm LLC, and Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy, 2015.  All rights reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site's author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used with love, provided that full and clear credit is given to the author named above with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

SUBSCRIBE!

Receive blog updates, shop news, and occasional behind the scenes love!

I respect your privacy.

Thank you!