Art of Tapestry book

The Art of Tapestry Weaving: a whole year!

The Art of Tapestry Weaving: a whole year!

My book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving, was published a year ago this week. It was a labor of love and I’m pleased at how well-received it has been all over the world.

This week I stopped by my local library and found a copy on the shelves. This was rather thrilling since every time I stop at the bookstore, they don’t have it. I am choosing to believe it has been sold and they buy another and it has been sold and they buy another and it has been sold...

Questions from the Book: Ease of weaving and loom length

Questions from the Book: Ease of weaving and loom length

What does loom length have to do with it?

Many of you are now working through my book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving, and I’ve been answering some of your questions here on the blog. One recent question from Zach was about how much warp you need to leave for various finishing techniques on the Mirrix Saffron loom. This question got me thinking about loom length and the video below was the result.

Loom length is something that I don’t hear tapestry instructors talking about a lot. Those of us who have been weaving for a long time intuitively understand the limitations of a short warp. But for new weavers, it isn’t something you’d automatically think about.

Questions from The Book: The fun of pick and pick

Questions from The Book: The fun of pick and pick

In my continuing series, Questions From The Book, I’m answering questions that come from readers of my newest book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving.

I have spent some time playing with a tapestry technique called pick and pick lately. This technique is a powerful one in the tapestry toolbox because it allows stripes to climb up the warp.

Weaving is the creation of cloth on a gridded structure created by the warp and weft. In tapestry, making horizontal lines in the direction of the weft traveling from side to side across the warp is easy. Making lines that travel in the same direction of the warp is more difficult.* Pick and pick is a fun technique because we get to play with creating forms and color effects in the warp-wise direction.

The video below demonstrates weaving pick and pick and I give a few tips for making things work out neatly and for catching mistakes. The two Change the Shed episodes I refer to in the video are HERE and HERE.

Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving: Choosing weft yarn

Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving: Choosing weft yarn

My book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving, is a tapestry techniques book. Published in November of 2020, I wrote it for my students and for anyone interested in tapestry weaving. I wanted to write a book that would become the reference that is always beside your loom. The book is quite comprehensive and I believe will be a great resource for beginners and more experienced practitioners alike.

There are always things that there isn’t room for in a book, even one that is 300 pages long, so I’m devoting some blog time to addressing frequent questions from readers of the book. I probably get the most questions from beginners about yarn. The video below was one that I did during launch week of the book in November and I think many people missed it because it was part of the launch.

Weaving from the Front vs. Back: Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving

Weaving from the Front vs. Back: Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving

Oh my but I get this question a lot. Should I weave from the front or the back? Or if you’re brand new to tapestry weaving, your question might be, WHAT??? What does that even mean, weaving from the front or from the back?

I’m spending some time addressing questions from readers of my book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving on the blog, and this is one I get not only from readers but from students in my workshops and online courses.

What does it mean to weave tapestry from the front or from the back?

I demonstrate this in the video below, but the short answer is that the side of the tapestry that will be showing when hung on the wall or used in some other manner, is the front. Tapestry is a one-sided fabric in almost all cases* and it is important to know which side of the weaving will be showing when it is displayed.

Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving: Ball Winders

Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving: Ball Winders

I have had some wonderful emails from people all over the world about my book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving, which was published in November of 2020. There are some concepts that are harder to translate into images and text and a video can really help demonstrate and some of you have sent me these questions over the last few months.

I have had yarn around me my entire life. Because of this long exposure to this very addictive substance, it is sometimes hard for me to remember that the way we use or manage yarn can be pretty foreign to people who did not toddle around with a ball of it in hand as an infant.

What a crazy week.

What a crazy week.

Well.

What a week it was!

The first week of November, 2020 is not one I will quickly forget. Not only was it perhaps the most contentious election season in American politics in my memory, but my book also launched. The launch date was supposed to be a week earlier, but due to an unfortunate delay in the book’s arrival at the warehouse from the printer a day late, the publication date was moved to November 3.

For me it was a week of extremes. The polarization in the United States is incredibly distressing to me and I found myself so often during the week of waiting for election results wondering how we were ever going to learn to listen to each other. And on the other hand, people started receiving my book and I had wonderful messages from all over the world about how much they loved it. (Believe me, that is a huge relief. If the book was a total flop after putting so many years of work into it, it would be disappointing to say the least.)