Here's part of the draft, showing the three interleaved design lines. Two of the design lines are parallel to one another, and the third is a different shape altogether. Each design line is threaded in a different color; the weaving software assumes that the warp colors are dark navy, medium teal, and light blue, with a light blue-violet weft. The tie-up contains wide bands of 3/1 and 1/3 twill.

If I put WeaveIt into View Detailed Fabric mode, this is what it shows:

Looks pretty waterish, right? Little waves, near shore, somewhere in the Caribbean or the Coral Sea, right?
The warp skeins are dyed, and drying on a rack on the balcony off the studio:

From left, a red-based navy, a teal/turquoise,and a light royal blue. All 60/2 silk, destined to be sett at about 80 epi. I sett the 2-color interleaved warps at 72 epi, but the 3-color ones need to be a little tighter or they tend to feel a little spongy. Not quite sleazy, just not firm enough.
Weft skeins, so far, are a really dark green-based navy, a dark-but-vivid blue-violet, and a mid-to-dark emerald green. Until they're dry, it's hard to judge value accurately! As soon as they're on the drying rack, I'll post some pictures.
6 comments:
Those colors are gorgeous! I am really looking forward to see the textile, the wave pattern is very interesting.
the Caribbean, Right!
Wow, those are gorgeous, Sandra. Can't wait to see them woven up. I like how organic they appear, and random. Good work!
I love those colors! Blues are my favorite. I can't wait to see what they look like woven.
That is the most watery looking water design I have ever seen! Bet it makes gorgeous cloth too...
Thank you for sharing your exceptional weavings. I spent six hours today trying to 'interleave' an advancing twill design. Don't understand it so will keep trying tomorrow.
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