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Whole Cloth

My Grandma ironed all her pillow cases. I grew up doing it in my Mom’s house too. It was probably because they often dried their sheets and towels on the clothesline and they benefitted from a good pressing. Was there anything more wonderful than snuggling up in crisp fresh sheets that had been dried in the gentle breezes of a soft West Virginia afternoon?

I, however, only iron pillow cases when I’ve forgotten them in the dryer or a basket too long and they are so fatally wrinkled they can’t even fit on the pillows. (Yes, yes, you’re very smart, this happens all the time).  Such was the case for the latest load. Often I’ll pop them back in the dryer but this time I decided to iron them. Among them was a pillow case I’ve had since I was a very small girl. It was probably a wedding present for my parents in the early 60s, perhaps even older as the pattern looks more like a 40s or 50s print. It has lovely, delicate, little pink and white flowers with green stems. They are old, stained, but they feel and smell like home.

I love to iron them, I mean I LOVE to iron them. I love ironing all cotton – not just that when you are done you have that amazing soft crispness but the actual act of ironing itself is magical, the warmth making everything straight and sure. If I were ever to become a quilter, it would mostly be for the joy of ironing all the cloth.

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Cloth. The cloth of these particular pillow cases is so old.  Old cloth.  Precious cloth.  It’s faded and the threads are spare.  In fact, I noticed that there are now actual holes where they have worn so thin.  How obvious does the metaphor have to be?!  Cloth is our lives.  In the Scriptures, the Psalms say that our Creator “knitted” us together in our mother’s wombs.  My brother is more genetically like me than anyone else on the planet.  I treasure our very special relationship.  We come from whole cloth, the whole cloth of my family.  Woven together but then separated to become our own out of the whole but still of the same cloth in the end.  The little worn places that show the stresses of our lives.  The little holes where our loved ones have left us.  My Grandma’s birthday was a few days ago and next month she’ll have been gone for six years.  She would laugh at me being sentimental over these old worn out pillowcases.  Growing up in the Depression in WV, she had little time for old or antique things.  She’d seen an awful lot of making do with not enough and nothing new.  Through the Lord’s blessings and her tireless work, she made sure her family’s sheets didn’t have holes.  But I can’t let these pillowcases go.  They are my family’s whole cloth.

Home again home again

…jiggity-jig.  Or maybe “loomity-loom” is more like it.  So nice to get back to the loom and really feel at home.  I never thought weaving would be my favorite fiber craft but it is certainly the one I miss the most when I can’t do it for whatever reason.  Starting a new project the past couple days was like “old home week” (does anyone still say that anymore? it’s in the Oxford Dictionary so it must be legit:)

I also spent some time giving Warren a nice clean-up.  He got vacuumed and dusted and re-greased AND the addition of 400 new heddles that move so smoothly on the heddle bars its like butter on a hot skillet (be thankful that’s the country-ism I decided on, my Dad’s favorite “it’s slicker’n snot on a door handle” also came to mind but I won’t subject you to it…oh, wait…I did).  They are so shiney. SO. SHINEY.

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Then, he was ready for a new warp.  While the scarf and Ms and Os obsession continues unabated, I am actually putting an overshot baby blanket on at the moment.  My Guild was doing an overshot “Weave-A-Long” last Fall. I am what you might call “fashionably late”, but I had already made the plan and have the yarn so here I go.  Trust me, there are others who are still also working on their projects too (ok, not just starting but all the same, working!) so I jumped in.  I don’t have anything yet to show but I thought it might be interesting to see how the loom gets a warp on it.  Macomber, my type of loom, is extraordinary for all kinds of reasons but one of the best is that parts fold out of the way so you can climb right in it and do your work.  Here’s the Squiggle willing to demonstrate how I sit “in” the loom to do the threading!

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I kept trying to get her to smile at me.  She said she wouldn’t look at the camera so it would seem like she was really working…the tongue was the finishing touch :q

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BUT the REAL point is look how close you can sit to the heddles!!

Cheese

Well, the “on the loom/at the wheel” idea isn’t going to work very well for the next couple of weeks since I don’t have a loom or wheel available at the moment.  (Happy Holidays!!) So the only thing I can show you on the loom this week is…ME!  I thought it would be fun to get a shot of me and Warren together.  He looks awesome, as always.  Me on the other hand?IMG_7057 total cheese.

 

On the loom/OFF the loom

Whew, these last few days are flying by so quickly, with so many truly lovely moments and activities abounding, that I warped, wove and finished this scarf without ever even getting to post the “On the loom” start of it!!

Watch close.  Here’s my magic trick…

NOW IT’S ON THE LOOM…

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POOF, NOW IT’S OFF!

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This was another successful experiment in Ms an Os.  I am seriously enthralled with the whole structure.  I think I still like the white and black one best but this is just such a fun play of pattern and color.  Once again, interesting to see the way it changed from on the loom when every thread was pulled so taut and straight to the lovely gentle movement of the pattern when it’s not under tension and has had a good soak. So very satisfying.

And she’s off…

The latest scarf has come off the loom, “got fringed”, and enjoyed a lovely hot bath.  Now she’s ready for her close-up Mr. DeMille…

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Oh my, the movement in that fabric.  There’s a daintiness to it that almost looks like little flowers but then the lines flow around them with so much energy.  It turned out even more sweet that I had hoped.  Given how Ms and Os works as a weave structure, I was also hoping that the drape on this scarf would be even lovelier than the others, if that was actually possible given that the drape is SO amazing with this bamboo.  In this pattern there are grouped warp threads that give a little space in the weave that I thought would work really nicely with the bamboo.  Again, it’s hard to tell if there’s MORE drape, but the drape is truly luscious on this scarf.  I was also pleasantly surprised that the weaving went much faster than the twill scarves.  The treadling was exactly the same as the last scarf so that can’t explain it.  My speculation is that because this has plain weave as a large part of the structure, it made working with the bamboo just a little easier.  I didn’t feel like I had to be quite as aware of the selvedges as they seemed to behave themselves much better.  Whatever the reason, this was simply a joy to weave and unlike any of the others, I want to make this one again right away!