Rigid Heddle Loom Tammy Bast Rigid Heddle Loom Tammy Bast

How to Nurture a Relationship that Lasts (with your Rigid Heddle) PT 4

This is my last post on this topic. So far we have looked at choosing the right loom, care and feeding of   our looms and our own attitudes. This week is about developing ourselves. Our rigid heddles have so much potential but if we don’t develop ourselves, we will never begin to unlock that potential.

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This is my last post on this topic. So far we have looked at choosing the right loom, care and feeding of   our looms and our own attitudes. This week is about developing ourselves. Our rigid heddles have so much potential but if we don’t develop ourselves, we will never begin to unlock that potential.

How can we develop ourselves?

1.      Read books, magazines and articles.

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My favourite rigid heddle weaving books are: The Weaver’s Idea Book by Jane Patrick and Inventive Weaving on a Little Loom by Syne Mitchell. Both contain patterns, but what I like best about them is the number of different types of weaving and the pictures. They cover colour and weave, mixing textures, pick up sticks, string heddles, using 2 and even three heddles and so much more!

Interweave puts out a magazine each year Little Looms (My scarf is on the front cover of this year’s edition!!) and it is filled with patterns for rigid heddles, tapestry looms and pin looms.

I love Pinterest! Search rigid heddle and there are tonnes of ideas, articles, blogs, and pictures that come up.

2.       Hang out with other Weavers

Your area may have a weaver’s guild. Or maybe there is an informal group that gets together, maybe at a home or your local yarn shop. You can learn so much from talking to other people or just watching. If you can’t find weavers near you, try hanging out online. There are facebook groups that are just for rigid heddle weavers and they are a fount of information! I belong to a group called “Rigid Heddle Looms” and it has 5.5k members who are scattered all over the world. That means that anytime I have a question someone in the world is awake and can give an answer!

Sometimes you will run across people who are very adamant about “right” and “wrong” ways of doing things. Take all advice with a grain of salt. There are always multiple ways of doing the same thing. Take advice, try lots of different things then do what works for you even if it is absolutely the “wrong” way. If it gives you the end result you want, it is the right way for you. There are no weaving police!

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3.      Take classes

If you have the opportunity to go and take a class with a real live instructor do it! Even if it is project based and you aren’t in love with the project you will learn something. Live instructors will be able to answer your specific questions, see what you are doing and suggest easier ways, new ways or even tell you when you can skip a step! In addition you will meet other weavers, who may live near you, who will now be your friends! And they will have helpful ideas too. Don’t be afraid to ask your local yarn store if they can have a class on a specific topic (pick up sticks, double weave, colour theory…whatever) Chances are if you want it, others do too. Or if you pull a whole group together the store will (probably) happily oblige if there is an able instructor.

Online classes are excellent too. You get to learn from the best instructors. They will endlessly repeat themselves and remain cheerful. Sometimes in person classes can be overwhelming and you forget half of what you learned by the next morning, online classes can be watched over and over again.

4.      Don’t be afraid to try new things

Remember, it is just string. If your project doesn’t work, it isn’t the end of the world. If you aren’t sure and can’t afford the loss try new techniques with less expensive yarn first. This helps you learn the skill, but it won’t finish the same so is only good for technique. I often try new patterns with cotton. It’s inexpensive and regardless of how it looks, I will have a usable tea towel! If you are sure of the technique but not sure how the fibre will finish buy a little extra and weave a sample.

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In conclusion, developing a lasting relationship with your rigid heddle isn’t much different from developing lasting relationships with people…Take the time to get to know each other, give them what they need to thrive, don’t expect what they are unable to give, adjust your attitude when needed and work on yourself!

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