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Weft Magic

November 27, 2017 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Skeins of Seacell dyed in moody blues and greens and teals and blacks rest on a wooden table | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
Handspun Sea Island Cotton will be used as an accent supplementary weft thread | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
Weft Yarn waiting to be woven into a babywrap | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading

The 8 of Cups, my first Tarot-inspired warp - is more than half threaded, which means we're getting so close to weaving I can almost taste it! These skeins of Seacell (and mini skein of handspun Sea Island Cotton) are the first weft; it will be a (deeply meaningful) personal piece for me.

You may notice that these skeins are not quite uniformly dyed.  This is intentional. I've been experimenting with a dye technique that leads to this sort of beautiful inconsistency. Usually when I dye weft for a wrap, I want all the skeins to be as similar as possible so that there are no noticeable differences through the length of the piece. I figured a personal piece then was the best place to experiment with this technique on a weft, though I plan to use it more in the future on warps! I'm excited to see just how it weaves up.

When I lay out the yarn to be dyed, I lay the skeins out next to each other so that they create a sort of canvas. Then I use the dye to paint symbols, or words, or images onto that canvas. Then I fill in the blank space with the (other) colors for the yarn. This imbeds the meaning into the threads in a far-below-the-surface kind of way. In this instance I painted triskeles and moon sigils into the yarn. The images themselves will never be visible in the final piece of cloth, but the meaning is deep in every thread.

With the impending federal regulations governing baby wraps effective early next year, I'll be launching a new babywrap brand with a couple of dear colleagues.  Our tagline for Cauldron & Cloth - chatter launching soon, keep an eye out! - is "woven with love and magic" and this is one of the ways I weave with magic. <3

In Dyeing, Babywearing, Tarot, Weaving, Wraps Tags 8 of Cups, Cauldron and Cloth, Fiber magic, Fiber witch, handdyed, handwoven baby wrap
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Lemon Pot tea towels

September 20, 2017 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Custom wedding gift of handwoven tea towels | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving
A lacy weave spills across a warp pinstriped in blue and white and yellow | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving
A pair of classic farmhouse tea towels in yellow and blue and white rest on a worn wooden table with a bowl of lemons | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving
Farmhouse kitchen tableau: 5 handwoven tea towels, a pitcher, and a bowl of lemons | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving

These tea towels began as a custom wedding gift order for a bride who dreams of a kitchen with a lemon tree growing in a blue ceramic pot.  They are woven in a variety of advancing twill variations that are intended to evoke the various glaze finishes or fine china patterns found on household ceramics.

I truly adore handwoven towels in the kitchen.  They are long lasting, hard wearing, super absorbent, and bring a spark of beauty and joy to my day every time I see or touch one.  I weave these with 100% unmercerized cotton for maximum absorbency and fluffy softness.  This has the added benefit that you can toss them in with a regular load of laundry, set the water to hot, and then toss them in the dryer when they're clean!

I warped enough on this project for a few towels for the shop as well as the wedding collection.  They absolutely flew out the door as fast as I could list them!  I'm going to have to do a longer warp the next time!  Tea towels are really fun and satisfying to weave.  The rhythm is a welcome change from baby wraps: with a weft change after one yard instead of 5, they're quick and fun.  I'd like to get a batch up in the shop in time for holiday shopping, tea towels are always a great gift!  

What colors or inspirations would you most like to see hanging on the bar of your oven door or use to wipe up spills in your kitchen?  Does your kitchen have a consistent color theme?  Tell me all about it! 

In Kitchen, Weaving Tags Lemon Pot, farmhouse style, farmhouse kitchen, handmade home, handmade kitchen, handwoven tea towel
3 Comments

Handspun wefts make my heart so happy! #Hipstrings Buoy Mussels makes an appearance on Surfacing

June 5, 2017 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
A textural wrap scrap cowl from Surfacing featuring hand spun wool weft | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
Handspun yarn featuring tones of brown and purple and blue poses with a mussel shell from the Maine coast and two quartz beach rocks | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
Handwoven fabric gets so much more character when made with a handspun weft | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
A teeny tiny miniscule mussel shell rests on a granite stone which rests on two skeins of handspun yarn.  The colors of the shell and the colors of the yarn match perfectly | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
A wooden seal poses with textured handspun cowl in a colorway evocative of the legends of the selkie | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading
A beach combed mussel shell shows off textured handspun yarn | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
A soapstone carving meets handwoven fabric in a selkie inspired colorway | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading

I've officially fallen head over heels for weaving with handspun yarn.  It is beautiful both visually and energetically.  Pictured here is a hood style cowl on the Surfacing warp that features handspun weft in a colorway inspired by mussels and the sea.  It was pretty fun digging out mussel shells from the Maine coast out of my jar of shells and beach stones for the photo shoot.  

The wool blend of the Buoy yarn and fiber from Hipstrings is ideal sweater yarn, and makes for a warm and outdoor-in-winter-worthy cowl.   Different fiber blends, of course, create different effects.  There are nearly unlimited options! I'm so looking forward to more handspun pieces, mostly cowls and neckwear, but I have a few hand spun wefts planned in the next year for full baby wrap pieces too!  Stay tuned! 

In Spinning, Studio, Weaving Tags buoy, hipstrings, hipstrings buoy, mussels, handspun, hand spun, handwoven
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And for a bit of eye candy, here&rsquo;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&rsquo;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&rsquo;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

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