Last Tuesday I was rummaging around the Appalachian Arts Crafts Center looking for a small tapestry loom to use as I learn about this form of weaving. I have a floor model at the house but it is busy right now making fleece rugs.
Anyway, as I was saying I was rummaging around looking in all the corners between boxes, you know the drill, surely there was an odd tapestry loom hanging around somewhere! I caught sight of piece of wood with a spring stretched across it and I went to investigate. Sure enough I had found one in the storage area set aside for barn loom pieces! Although, when I managed to get it out from the barn loom pieces it was only half of a tapestry loom. I spent a good bit of time looking for the other half of the loom, but it was nowhere to be seen.
I brought it home with me that day, to see if I could come up with any ideas about how to complete it. I got to thinking about some plans for a tapestry loom that I had seen, made from copper pipe, and I went looking for them and I found them on the "Brennen-Maffei.com" website.
Armed with my diagram and the top half of the loom I went to Downtown Hardware in Oak Ridge, TN to see if they could help me. We talked about what I was trying to do, and having the diagram really helped them to see what I was trying to accomplish. I ended up leaving the dear loom with them over night as they fitted the new pieces.
The completed loom has a 36inch height and a 31inch width. There are the threaded rods and bolts to use as a tensioning device and the cute angle pieces at the bottom to hold the crossbar in place.
The pieces are not yet glued together, and I think I will be bringing this piece to the Center on Tuesday to get some opinions about it. I am thinking that I may have gone a little overboard in the over all height of the loom, the diagram we used was for a much narrower loom, so I figured that as we were already adding to it for width we may as well add to the height. I also think it might be wise to reenforce that lower crosspiece by inserting a dowel or a rod of some sort into it before we apply any glue.
The loom is back in pieces and ready to go back to the Center for an evaluation, I don't know what I would do without this weekly get together with the Tuesday Weavers, where we share ideas and finished objects, hopes and dreams, and sorrows and joys. I hope you have someone in your life that will cheer you on too!
Until next time, Happy Weaving, Tina
Yeah! They did come through for you!
ReplyDeleteJust found you guys again while surfing...while back someone was working on a Hearthside Loom... did they ever find those harness/lamm hooks? Do you think I could make some from wire hangers? I belong to a museum volunteer group of weavers. What I have read of your blogs, we must be related!
ReplyDeleteI belong to a museum volunteer group of weavers. What I have read of your blogs, we must be related!
ReplyDeleteหีฟิต