Monday, November 10, 2025

Glove One done, Ikigai

 I found an audiobook to knit by

which accompanied me through Glove One and untangling the remaining yarn ready for Glove Two. After I'd done that I fell asleep for a while, the usual result of being unoccupied with a task while an audiobook plays.  The narrator is so calm and restful it's like having a cat reading to you.


Then later, the first glove is finished

Thank you for the kind comments about the little gallery of a few of my fiber art pieces. Here's a bit more about some of them. And since the light's better, maybe a couple of better views. And an explainer about the sawblade loom.

I thought Ceres deserved a better shot. I was too tired to climb up and get her off the wall then, but now I've managed it and here you can see her better.

 


Technically, this is one of the better fiberworks I've made. Ceres, aka Demeter, goddess of corn and other grains. 

I started at the top, adapting a complex Victorian knitted stitch pattern called Wheatsheaf. 

This is knitted, two-dimensional, then I moved into crochet for the full belly, and you see that it becomes three dimensional as the roots develop. This was a single skein of yarn.  It's about grain and fertility, as you see.

And the rigid heddle piece is the only one I did before giving the loom to an eager beginner. There are tons of experiments in this piece. Then I concluded this loom was too restrictive for what I needed to do, and passed it on.


Charleston, one of the red pieces, I wove on a cardboard loom I made, partly because I don't like red. But it's not what the artist wants, it's what the art wants. 



So I tried to make it frivolous and silly, with ribbon and interesting patterns, leaving the top of the warp bunched like shoulder straps on a dress good for dancing the Charleston. 

The dress needed red. The weft threads are mostly fuzzy, not out of focus -- some are hand spun, some are unspun roving.

And here's the saw blades, donated by contractor friend Michael, which I used for the circular parts of some works. They're too blunt for his woodworking, but you still have to handle the points with care.



I used some hand spun to show you how I threaded the warp. Back and forward over the teeth, progressing round the circle. Then you start weaving from the center.

Here's the back, showing how you just catch the teeth. Once it's woven you slip one or two threads off the teeth, a bit tricky,  and the rest come off more easily, giving you a circular weaving and an empty loom for the next project.

Anything can be a loom. 

Rainy here today, but I did a bit of indoor exercise, and made broth from the remains of the game hen, ready for soup. 

Then I made a pot of soup, game hen broth, diced tomatoes, chickpeas, fusilli, enough for six meals starting with Sunday supper.

Happy day everyone, the best loom of all is the enchanted one, our brain, where the magic shuttles work.






32 comments:

  1. The sawblade technique is interesting, and I like the frivolity of the Charleston piece.

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  2. Fascinating use of a cast out circular saw for circular weaving.

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    1. It's certainly durable. These things are heavy.

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  3. Fascinated by the saw blade. The Charleston piece is wonderfully playful. Ceres is beautiful.

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    1. I think the saw blade has surprised a few people! Thank you for the nice words.

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  4. Love the analogy of our brains to looms. We do weave thoughts and words. Brilliant!

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  5. Your saw blade weaving has caught my attention. What could be done with that circle? And what immediately popped into my mind was a silver moon ff to the side of a dark sky made of varying shades of blue, gray, and black strips with random glittery silver beads. I am actually quite excited about this. I will weave it off a branch which will be folded down over the scene as if it is being viewed through the branches of a winter tree. I am actually quite excited about the project and will begin collecting material from the sale sweaters and shirts at goodwill thank you for this spark!

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    1. This is great! I hope we get to see it in process, too.

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  6. Thank you for giving me the size information about the pieces I mentioned yesterday. Helps me understand what I'm looking at. I also did finally figure out that clicking on one of your photos/images brings up a higher-resolution version. This is great for the photos of your art as well as for images such as the quotation by Sherrington. Perhaps not all of your readers know this, as some said the photos were hard to see? Oh, and I had seen the Charleston piece as a dress right away, before you said so today! You implied that with the way you separated the warp into 2 bunches for display.

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  7. If I was trying to use that circular saw blade for anything, I would have cuts all over my hands. I'm a little clumsy:)

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  8. Fascinating use of saw blades as looms! Who would ever think to use those in a new way? And I love your Ceres work -- I could see the wheat stalks immediately. With the full pregnant belly, what a beautiful representation of the Divine Feminine! And the Charleston one is such fun. Adding the straps at the top and the fringe at the bottom does make it look like a flapper's dress!

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    1. I had a feeling you'd be in tune with Ceres. And get it. Yes in Charleston, for once the fringe on a weaving has meaning!

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  9. You're so clever!
    I made a pot of chili in the crockpot yesterday and it was perfect since our weather got cold here and we had a bit of snow last night!

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    1. I haven't made chili in ages. Note to self, get out the recipe from World Central Kitchen cookbook.

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  10. My mind is blown- using a circular saw for weaving. Not in a million years would I have thought of that.

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    1. You weave with what you've got!

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    2. You weave with what you've got!

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    3. Why did that appear twice?? But if I try to delete one, both will vanish. Oh well.

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  11. I enjoyed seeing all your creations very much and the circular saw was surprising and fun to see. I never would have thought of using that, very clever. Your soup looks great too, just the kind I enjoy, especially with leftovers. I've recently made a vegetable chowder with cheese, with three days of leftovers, which was very nice. Good to have a rest from the kitchen and lovely to have several nutritious and tasty meals ready to go.

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    1. I'm glad you liked what you read. I'm having soup again today, better flavor than yesterday.

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  12. Your knitting and fibre art look amazing. I'm not sure I'd trust my dexterity to use a saw blade safely but it's a neat idea.

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    1. It's a bit stabby but the real sharpness had been blunted with use, so not as lethal as you might think.

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  13. You are very talented!!! The soup looks good and perfect for our cold weather.
    Cathy

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  14. Oh yes. The saw blades do make excellent looms.
    I really love the ceres piece. It does look like the fertility goddess
    Full of womanly curves. Beautiful

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  15. I'm sitting here with very cold hands and seeing this reminds me that it's time to dig out my typing mitts again. Now to find them!

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  16. Thanks for showing those saw blades. Now it makes sense!

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  17. I like the red/pink one very much!

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  18. Very cute fingerless gloves!
    You are so creative. Always like to see whatever you have to show us. :)

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