Saturday, November 29, 2025

Band weaving resistance

Here's where art goes subversive. I needed to do some weaving today, namely band weaving using the rigid heddle I carved from stiff plastic. 

Then I thought it would be good to make the band into a lanyard for a yellow (the color of resistance) whistle, the current anti ICE device.

So I'm giving this to someone at risk, art in service of activism.  Here's the order of events today, with breaks for lunch, crunchy tofu, afternoon tea, tea and pumpkin pie, and stretches to avoid getting sore.

The closer pictures of the work in progress are blurry because at that point the warps are attached to my belt, too close for the camera to focus well. Bear with me, I think you'll get the gist.




 
That plastic thing with holes and slots is the heddle. This device is thousands of years old. Well this particular one is a few months old.
 

Here's threads, nine, one per hole and slot 


Threaded up, one thread per, using a tiny crochet hook as a sleying tool. Sleying is threading the heddle. Listen up, there will be a quiz 

Here's the other end of the warp threads, knotted together then attached with linen nonslip thread to the ADA compliant grab bar where there's a step up. You don't have to be ADA compliant but it doesn't hurt.


Ted and Big Ursy checking I've got the warp threads even and the heddle straight 


And here's the band under way  it's weft faced, meaning the horizontal threads, the weft, are what you mainly see.

The narrow part was where I was establishing the band. I can go back and undo that when I finish, so that I end with a fairly consistent width. It's a workaround because you weave with the skills you've got.

Happy day everyone.

Ah what a tangled web we weave 

When we arghgh the warps by forgetting they're attached and get up to leave.

Sez Ted and Big Ursy, who photobombed a picture here and there.






32 comments:

  1. That is looking good and a very clever way of weaving.

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    1. Ancient weaving from the early South Americans. Guatemalan weavers still make beautiful back strap works.

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  2. I wasn’t expecting the whistle band to look like that given the beginning process pictures. Beautiful. May it never be needed!

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    1. I set up everything I might need, then found easier ways, so the clamps didn't come in to it in the end.

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  3. I hope you have a day with few tangles. 😀

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  4. Imprisoned by the weft and warp of life!

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  5. Another amazing project, Boud. Love it!

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    1. I've been feeling like a bit of back strap weaving for a while.

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  6. It seems very complicated. I’m sure it’s not once seen in action
    I’m a see and do person. I don’t usually understand what’s happening when it’s a set of directions. I know. I’m not normal lol

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    1. Go online and find The Durham Weaver and you'll see. A lot of people need to see before they do.

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  7. Fascinating photos of weaving with a heddle! How ingenious that is.

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    1. The idea has been around for a couple of thousand years. There are Roman examples found by archaeologists. I expect some enslaved woman invented the first one

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  8. It's good to have a plan and then be able to execute it. Satisfying.

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    1. I usually find I've backed into projects but yes, this one is planned.

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  9. You are a talented woman. I may have gotten up while attached to something too, although I can't remember what it was right now, but I know that feeling:)

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    1. It's similar to plunging your hands under the tap while wearing your indoor fingerless gloves. Doh!

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  10. I think I will fail the quiz--lol! But this is fascinating.
    Great idea to go with the whistles!! :)

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    1. Weaving has a whole different vocabulary. It's important to remember what's not familiar to civilians.

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  11. How wonderful to use art as defiance.

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  12. This civilian appreciated all the descriptive phrases, which I quickly forgot. But I am a visual learner, and the ideas seemed pretty clear with your photos. Thanks!

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    1. I think you only need to know the words if you're buying, or if it's me, making, tools. Otherwise, people have been doing this work for eons without talking about it.

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  13. Way above my pay grade! You are a creative one and I think Ted and Big Ursy agree.

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  14. Wait! Are the ends tied to something? I can't quite see what holds the ends while you are weaving. Looks great though!

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    1. Yes, the warp ends are bundled and tied together then the bundle is attached with string to a handy secure support, in this case the ADA compliant grab bar! Guatemalan weavers use a tree.

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    2. I went back and added in a photo. Thanks for pointing out that missing bit of info.

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  15. I've always wondered what happens if you need a break halfway through... like arm or finger weight knitting when you suddenly need to answer the door...
    I'm sure I've seen heddle in action at medieval re-enactments

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    1. Rigid heddles might be seen there, more likely string heddles, I think
      The warp ends are knotted at each end and you untie your nearest end, from your belt, between sessions. This band will take quite a few hours, over several days.

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  16. I remember doing this many many years ago. Fun and it looks so good.

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  17. you never seem to the short of a project - or ideas for sevdral projects ahead

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