I wove some more on Fire Series scarf #2, and when I needed a break I went and got the "big" digital camera, a Canon 10Mpx heavyweight. Man, does it ever do a better job on reds!
Here's a view of the first scarf, under the loom on its way onto the cloth storage beam. From this side of the loom, what I see is mostly the purple hills.

From the other side, the rust-red trees are more predominant.

These colors are very close to what my eye sees, with no help from Photoshop. A big improvement over the little camera.
Also, some 2000 picks into scarf #2 of the series, I'm seeing some very interesting visual effects created by the tramm silk weft.
Here's a closeup of the weft spool. Depending what Blogger does to the resolution, you should be able to see the yarn structure, 3 differently-colored plies, each with almost no twist, put together with almost no plying twist. Click to see the biggest version Blogger is willing to display.

When I look at the cloth straight on, with the camera placed only a few inches above the breast beam, I hardly see any woven pattern at all. What I see is wiggly, parallel lines in the warp-wise direction that are created by the color sequence in the weft yarn. Again, click to see the effect more clearly.

From the side, I only see the woven pattern, and don't see the weft as multicolored. Cool! In addition, there's a very high degree of irridescence in this one compared to #1, which I credit to the weft yarn.

4 comments:
WOW!
Simply stunning, Sandra!
very magical...love the colors and the camera takes great photos...
Beautiful - and exciting. Your blog is wonderful and informative. A few weeks ago I bought the same tram silk in another color (green/blue) - so I have really enjoyed seeing the results you obtained. It helps with planning my project.
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