Thursday, January 25, 2007

Steve's New Belt


I made Steve a belt. It is ayatakadai work. I really like ayatakadai work-it is rather mindless and does not require a lot of contemplation. It has 24 bobbins arranged in four layers 6bobbins wide. Each bobbin has 6 strands of embroidery floss. It resembles card weaving with the cards alternating S and Z twist. The weft structure is different however. In card weaving there would be only one weft and it would pass through a shed having 2 threads from each card above the shed and 2 threads from each shed on the bottom. This has 2 weft bobbins. The two wefts are thrown through opposite sides through the two sheds created every time a set of moves are made on the ayatakadai. One shed happens on the front face between the first and second layers. The second shed happens between the third and fourth layers on the back face. This results in a very thick braid that is moderately soft if you take care not to beat it too much. Finding a belt buckle was difficult. A 1 inch belt buckle was too little and a 1.5 inch was too big to fit through Steve's belt loops on all his favorite pants. We had to cannibalize a 1.25 inch buckle from an old belt. That size is not available at fabric stores.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

More Early Garb


More generic early garb. The under and overtunics are quite generic for early medieval. The cloak is an all wool Kinsdale cloak from Folkway patterns. Wish I still had it. Had to gather the cloak onto the collar by hand.

My Early SCA Garb-The Watermelon Stealing Dress


This was my second favorite dress. It was known as the watermelon stealing dress. It was green on the outside and pink on the inside like a watermelon. You could stuff a watermelon up either sleeve. It is a bliaut, done in the style that suggests that a bliaut had a curved waistline hem that dipped in the front. There is a big question about whether the actual bliauts were a loose gown with a vest with a curved lower front laced over them. or something that was actually cut and tailored to be that way. Whatever, it was a favorite.

My first SCA Garb


Yes, I was one of those born costumers who refused to go to an event in borrowed garb. The picture on the left is my first garb. It was a crinkled cotton, which managed to look old the first time it was worn. Those are tapestry ribbons at the neck and sleeves. It was laced up the back and I used metal eyelets. The date would be generic early medieval.

The garb on the right is about my fourth atempt. It has a cotton undertunic, an overtunic in black and a tabard. I have on a headdress from 1150 so that would be my best guess on the date.

My Old SCA Garb-Physician's Outfit, 1150


The theme this week is a blast from the past. This is my favorite of the old SCA garb. This is a physician's outfit of about 1150. Place would be anywhere in continental Europe. The personna story is that I was a university trained physician, born in Wales, educated in Italy and somehow did not wander back to Wales immediately after graduation.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

A Blast from the Past


This came from the Cedar Rapids Gazette, 5/11/1983.
It shows two of my favorite people-Mistress Alina and Lord Gavin.
They still live in Cedar Rapids and they still play in the SCA.
I get to play with them.

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

My Tudor Court Dress


This is the Tudor court dress that Lady Gwynne so kindly made for me. I made the hat. Will redo the photos when I have redone the corset, since I have lost weight.

I am Still NOT a Broncos Fan


I am still NOT a Broncos football fan. In this photo, our good friends, Mark and Susan, have given me a giant Elway Pez dispenser. I call him John, as in Elway. About all he is good for is dispensing Pez. Photo by my long suffering spouse, Steve, in Fort Collins, CO, 12-05. By the way, I know that Steve would not really, actually hack my website or my blog. However he is still threatening to make my homepage into a Broncos themed extravaganza.

Sarah is NOT an Iowa Fan


For the official record, Sarah wishes it to be known that she is not an Iowa Fan. Too many of her formative years were spent in Ames and she is still an Iowa State fan. Photo taken by my long suffering spouse, Steve, in Fort Collins, CO, 12/05.

Another Witchhunter Robin


Another picture of Sarah in the Witchhunter Robin outfit I made her.

Sarah's Witchhunter Robin Outfit


We now have a scanner that works at our house! This is the outfit that I made last summer for my daughter so that she could go to an anime convention in Cedar Rapids, IA. She is supposed to be the character Witchhunter Robin. This outfit has four layers: a floor length black dress, a ruffled petticoat, a 3/4 length black, knit sleeveless vest split to the waist on the sides and front and back and a floor length, fitted red trenchcoat. Sarah made the necklace with the large red jewel out of Fimo clay. I had the most problem with the dress. It took 8 yards of light weight linen. Since the cartoonists who draw this character do not sew, they have no idea how hard it is to make a skirt swirl and flare out without petticoats and a hoop skirt. I ended up using a Vogue designer evening gown pattern that had a very full skirt as my starting pattern. Then I had to put horse hair braid along the hem to get it to stand out more over the ruffled petticoat. We really lucked out because the red raincoat was only $20 at a second hand store. I have already told Sarah that if she grows too much to wear this costume next year that I am just going to alter the black linen dress-not making a new costume from scratch!

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Just Off the Loom


Finally! The dog is off the loom and looks pretty good. This is a moderately coarse wool yardage woven for an SCA friend, Mistress Alina. Eventually it will be make into a tunic for a very dear friend of Alina's who has a Viking persona and is very, very enthusiastic about authenticity.

The wool is a mill end. Several of us spent an evening getting it from cones into skeins ready for dyeing. I had to dye it twice with fiber reactive dyes. Don't know if the dyes were old or if the wool was somehow resistant to dyes. Then it took another evening to get it back into skeins and wound on a warping board in 1 inch wide segments. Several people from the shire learned how to thread through the reed and through the heddles. Then Alina had a death in the family and I had too much to do for several months. When I came back to Alina's loom, a small Harrisville loom, I was convinced that I had a "dog on the loom"-something that really, really did not wish to woven on that loom at that time. I took it off Alina's loom and put it on my AVL at home. It came quietly and I had no tension problems at all. I turned out to be an extremely sticky warp. I tried my usual remedy of spraying it liberally with the cheapest,strongest hairspray I could find. The only thing tht accomplished was to make the loom room smell of White Rain. I still had to clear every shed. One of my weaving friends says that boiled flax seed warp dressing would have spared me all the trouble. The fabric was a little stiff and scratchy before it was washed. 5 minutes on the gentle cycle with warm wash water and cold rinse water, using Orvus paste worked well. It is just a little felted and the hand is much better.

Weaving Draft for Alina's Red Wool Yardage

Draft name: plain weave
Loom: floor loom, jack action

Warp
Fiber: wool
Color: red
Size: 1500 yd./lb. (several yards woven with 4 strands of 6000 yd./lb because I ran out)
Sett: 12 epi

Weft
Same as warp
Beat: 12 ppi

Measurements:
Width in reed: 30 inches
Width on loom: 29.5 inches
Width off loom: 29.25 inches
After finishing: 28.5 inches
Wove 6 yards but did not record how much was originally on the loom.


Thursday, January 4, 2007

I am NOT a Broncos fan!


Contrary to whatever my husband may say, I am not a Denver Broncos fan. It started as just a little delusion with him and it has turned into a nasty hobby. Now he takes pictures of me looking at anything related to the Broncos so that he has "proof" that I am a fan. To discourage him from hacking my blog and planting "evidence" that I am a fan, I have done it myself. This was taken when we went to California in 10-06 at the navy Peer in San Francisco.

My New Year's Resolutions

There is a belief among psychotherapists that putting one's goals down on paper makes them more likely to be achieved. Here are mine for next year and a little about why in the world I would want to do these things.

1. Complete all the weaving and kumihimo braiding for part 2 of the Certificate of Excellence in Handweaving from the Handweaving Guild of America. Life happened last year and I did not get the work done and could not submit it. I have 2 years before they will judge again but it may have become time to "fish or cut bait."

2. Become proficient in using my drawloom. I have a Glimakra with 8 shafts on the front and 10 draw shafts. Just cannot seem to ever find the time and motivation to sit down and actually weave on it.

3. Convert my AVL loom to a different kind of drawloom and explore weaving Mayan brocading without having to use pickup or a backstrap loom. Would love to be able to make my own huipils but I hate pickup and my back will not tolerate a backstrap loom for very long.

4. Lose 20 pounds. Like every other woman in America I really want the magic weight loss fairy to come to my house very soon.

5. Help several of my weaving friends start and maintain a blog about doing the COE in Weaving. I have doubts that we will be able to cause a lot of change in HGA but at least we can ventilate. Hope we can help one another figure out the unwritten rules for this thing.

6. Put all the family photographs and paper memorabilia in albums and label them as best I can. I have both my parents' entire collection of photos-none of them labeled. Then I have 30 years of my own photos, most of which are not labeled either.