Weaving with impossibly thin linen yarn (or conquering the yarn that nearly broke me)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 66

  • @CrowingHen
    @CrowingHen  Год назад +5

    What's the story of your nemesis 'yarn' (or another ingredient)? What would it take to try again with what you know now?

  • @beaumdavidson
    @beaumdavidson Год назад +54

    It's funny, it seems that with many skills like this, there is a fine line between meditative peacefulness and blood-curdling frustration.

  • @trampledbygeese
    @trampledbygeese Год назад +13

    Such a calm video for such frustrating yarn

  • @annieweaver1123
    @annieweaver1123 Год назад +22

    Hello weaver! Beautiful scarves and that sewing machine😮 my great grandmother was an expert linen weaver and I have many of her handwoven textiles. Apparently she used a damp towel draped on the warp behind the heddles for humidity.

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +5

      Thanks for sharing!! That's a really good idea.

    • @annestrand6933
      @annestrand6933 Год назад +1

      Thank you for sharing, I will use a damp cloth now that I am having my first battle with linen.

  • @debracisneroshhp2827
    @debracisneroshhp2827 Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing your craft and the education we get from 'trial and error' to 'satifaction' when things work out. 🙏😇💫✨🌱🌿🌻🐝🌳🌎💖🙌😺

  • @phoebebaker1575
    @phoebebaker1575 Год назад +2

    “What would it take for you to try again? With all the things you know now?” I keep trying to think of yarn and crafting materials, but all I can think of is untangling the tangled weave of my soul.

  • @CrowingHen
    @CrowingHen  Год назад +15

    Sorry about the audio everyone. Been fighting with my computer to get this done and it seems to have its own ideas. I'm saving up for some more ram to fix it.
    As a shepherd I find it funny how rams cost about the same for my computer as they do for my flock - and are just as important.

    • @catandsparrow
      @catandsparrow Год назад

      Lol about rams... beautiful video and thanks for the tips on maintaining the humidity, I've been thinking about weaving linen but was hesitant, now I know what to do!

  • @artbyrica
    @artbyrica Год назад +9

    Beautiful video! I'm not a weaver, but this makes me admire handwoven fabrics even more.

  • @kathrynbassett1535
    @kathrynbassett1535 Год назад +10

    Such a beautiful video I am trying to grow flax to try and spin to try and weave it. My great grandmother and her sisters worked in the Belfast linen mills so it feels important to try thanks 😊 for the encouragement sending good thoughts and wishes from Katy from NZ 😊

  • @awilson8521
    @awilson8521 Год назад +2

    So glad I found this before I started weaving linen! Also, I guess I'll weave outside. It's so humid in the morning here (80%). 😂

  • @AndreaAlexander
    @AndreaAlexander Год назад +4

    Congrats on conquering linen!! The scarves turned out beautifully and I'm sure they made your friends super happy. That’s such a special gift! I also loved your commentary in this video 🤩

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much!!

    • @TheQwuilleran
      @TheQwuilleran 5 месяцев назад

      Likewise! Your voice is lighthearted and clear​ @@CrowingHen I thought I was listening to an audiobook, you're that good.

  • @JustinDOehlke
    @JustinDOehlke 6 месяцев назад

    Oh man, I really enjoyed this. Especially how the yellow transitioned to salmon. Very nice.

  • @beanoneya
    @beanoneya Год назад +3

    Nice tension trick! Not beating those few, that's new to me. Very cool.

  • @danielschneider9312
    @danielschneider9312 Год назад +4

    Lovely scarves! It's funny, I learned to weave on a linen singles cloth, so I've never really gotten the hate. One thing I do is to lay a damp cloth (tea towel type weight) on the warp, just behind the heddles

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад

      Thank you.
      It just goes to show that linen isn't really evil, it just wants the weaver to adjust to it's needs.
      I like the idea of the damp cloth. How long before you weave do you place it on the warp?

    • @danielschneider9312
      @danielschneider9312 Год назад +2

      Generally about 10-15 minutes. It's funny; having learned on linen, I actually had some issues when I started to weave wool-the stretchiness made tensioning a nightmare! To this day I have to actively remember to not over tension wool warps

  • @linr8260
    @linr8260 Год назад +3

    Ooooooh that fabric is beautiful @.@ congratulations on mastering your nemesis!
    Linen is my favourite fiber to wear, so learning to spin and weave it is my end goal... Once I figure out a way to get around the accessibility issues of using a distaff.

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +2

      Mine too!
      A distaff can help spinning linen, but it isn't required. There's no distaff police. Like all crafts, it's about trying different ways to find which matches your style. I find I use the Hitchhikers Distaff (a towel) a lot these days as it's also the preferred distaff of the best (finest and most consistent) linen spinner I know.
      some different styles to try: ruclips.net/video/1EpceAEdQZQ/видео.html

    • @linr8260
      @linr8260 Год назад +1

      @@CrowingHen omg thank you, I'd been trying to find stuff on the towel method but youtube search is... As helpful as google has been these past few years. I will look into this, thank you!

  • @sonjanordahl3158
    @sonjanordahl3158 Год назад +2

    I am new to weaving and I am trying a hemp yarn. It feels funny compared to cotton. My biggest nemesis right now is ME. I go to try a different technique for dressing my loom, something I have watched on RUclips 2 or 3 times, a week or two before I'm ready to dress. Then I don't bother to rewatch just before I dress. So, I miss a step and end up with a MESS. Once I make my way through the problem, I remember what I forgot and next time it will go better. But why do I insist on trying new things without having a hand written step-by -step. I am my own worst enemy. I need to slow down, quit trying to trust my memory, and think things through before I do them. By the way great videography.

  • @MijnWolden
    @MijnWolden Год назад +2

    What beautiful, witty, soothing and informative voice-over! I love this video so much 😍

  • @earthandgleanerssociety7622
    @earthandgleanerssociety7622 Год назад +3

    Just fantastic Raven, thank you! love the tip on humidity, and yes, to the coreopsis shift in colour!- I use washing soda as a modifier post dye bath to shift my oranges into reds on cellulose fibres

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +1

      Great tip! I have so much to learn about natural dyes.
      I'm hoping to experiment with more natural dyeing this year. It's funny how some years dye seeds are everywhere and this year I can't find coreopsis in stock, not even for ready money. I might have to order some seed from Ontario.

  • @ParkrosePermaculture
    @ParkrosePermaculture Год назад +2

    Agh! I'm so excited you have a new video! I discovered your channel recently and binged all your videos and am so excited you have a new one. Thanks for sharing your skills with us!

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much! So glad you can drop by.

  • @annestrand6933
    @annestrand6933 Год назад +1

    I am battling linen for the first time now, and I have only been weaving a year.. I like to challenge my self and learn along the way. I am so grateful for the WWW and people like you sharing

  • @Eternal_Hope_Q
    @Eternal_Hope_Q Год назад +1

    I grew, dried retted, rippled, broke, scutched and hackled flax...spun hundreds of metres of singles...warped my loom up and...let's just say it didn't go well. I must confess to crying like a baby and put my loom away for a couple of years! 😬
    This video gives me hope!
    I might grow flax again next year (it's been a couple of years now so I've forgotten (enough) how awful the process is ha!

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +1

      Ouch, homegrown handspun... that pain would take some time to heal. Hugs.

    • @Eternal_Hope_Q
      @Eternal_Hope_Q Год назад

      @@CrowingHen I'm toying with the idea of grow flax again in 2024 so it's possible to heal a broken linen heart 💘

  • @TheQwuilleran
    @TheQwuilleran 5 месяцев назад +1

    I'm a new crafter trying to learn from the wisdom of experts while I save up for equipment. So forgive this question, please, what is the purpose of the maroon ribbon? Is that where a warp snapped, so it performs a stabilizing "splint" function?

  • @ingeleonora-denouden6222
    @ingeleonora-denouden6222 Год назад +3

    Hi R. I am not a weaver (except for the occasional backstrap-weaving). I knit, crochet and experiment with other needle-crafts. Nemesis yarn? Knitting thick (bulky?) wool on thick needles (8 mm or more) gives me pain in my wrists (in the thumb joint). I don't remember other problems with yarns ... except unraveling mohair (to repurpose it) 🧶🧶🧶

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад

      Thick yarn. Supposed to be so easy on arthritis and yet I have the hardest time with it too.

  • @CelineAdobea
    @CelineAdobea 9 месяцев назад

    Woow well done for sticking with it and finding a way that worked 🙌🏾

  • @shelleymcafee8197
    @shelleymcafee8197 Год назад

    Thank-You, that was so helpful!!!
    (Haven’t tried weaving with linen yet, but have been planning to do so; Your story will save Me many headaches, I’m sure!)

  • @kevincalvey4973
    @kevincalvey4973 Год назад +2

    Very informative!

  • @khimbalee5087
    @khimbalee5087 Год назад

    Thank you for such a helpful video. I’m beginning to weave with linen and I am going to learn from your experience.

  • @venite_makes_things
    @venite_makes_things Год назад

    I love your documentaries! Your dry humour is always a delight and the end result is so beautiful. I'm knitting linen now to have a top ready when it becomes hot again. My fingers might like a bit more humidity to deal with that linen...

  • @healthygreenbrave
    @healthygreenbrave Год назад +1

    That is fantastic! Now if only I find out what a warp end is, lol!

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +2

      Yeh, it's tricky. Weaving is so old, the words have become task-specific jargon.
      An "end" refers to one thread or yarn used for the warp (the yarns the loom holds).

    • @healthygreenbrave
      @healthygreenbrave Год назад

      Have you done a video about the parts of a loom?

  • @diannej2406
    @diannej2406 Год назад +2

    Not a weaver, but my nemesis is finishing the second sock of a pair I'm knitting with very fine yarn and tiny needles.

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +2

      Oh noses, not the second sock. That is a true nemesis.

  • @Jen-pz6qg
    @Jen-pz6qg Год назад

    Love this video, I hope you make more of weaving linen! I am hoping you can tell me what your loom is, for I also am looking for one that is good for linen. Thanks a whole lot!

  • @GrapefruitAndChaiTea
    @GrapefruitAndChaiTea 7 месяцев назад +1

    It makes me wonder... most homes from my grandmother's or great-grandmothers' generation (in Québec Canada) would have their own sheep or would grow own flax and would weave their yarn (and linen?) on their big Leclerc or Heritage (or other) loom. But, most houses back then were heated with wood stoves, which tends to make your place very dry... I'm wondering how they managed to work this out.. 😮 bucket with water on the stove, perhaps?

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  7 месяцев назад +2

      Great question.
      It was a different time then. A time when housecoats were the norm - a very warm coat for wearing over your clothes. Fuel was too valuable to waste on heating the home - so if the woodstove/fire was going, there would be cooking. Usually boiled water. Accounts from that time are of people keeping ink in their inside pocket of the housecoat to stop it freezing in the winter and sleeping with the sourdough starter for the same reason.
      And people used to specialize. To be efferent at wool or linen production, it takes slightly different tools and techniques. Changing the tools to match the new fibre takes more time than weaving the cloth, so they avoided this whenever possible. A linen weaver would often set up their loom in a room with a dirt floor as this helped increase the moisture content. A wool weaver might not have the same needs.

    • @GrapefruitAndChaiTea
      @GrapefruitAndChaiTea 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CrowingHen Wow that is so interesting! Thank you so much :)

  • @fabricboi
    @fabricboi Год назад +1

    Love the video very informative
    How long do I need to dampen the linen before weaving?
    Thank you ❤❤

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  Год назад +2

      Thank you.
      I usually spray the water, then make a cup of tea. By then it's soaked in. But it's better if I can keep the humidifier on all the time so the yarn doesn't dry out and I don't need to risk getting water sprayed on the loom.

  • @MsZeldasaga
    @MsZeldasaga 10 месяцев назад

    What kind of loom is that?

    • @CrowingHen
      @CrowingHen  10 месяцев назад

      This style of loom is a counterbalance.