¿Te interesa realizar un curso online de tècnicas del tejido en telar con Anna Champeney?

Si te interesa aprender técnicas de diseño y tejido en telar de bajo lizo online, escríbanos y suscribir a nuestro boletín. ¿Te interesa aprender a tejer online y aprender técnicas profesionales de diseño?

Contacta con nosotros

Textiles naturales > Blog > FABRIC WEAVING & NATURAL DYEING

DANISH TAPESTRY WEAVING AND TV

It´s only been a few hours since a programme called Babel went out on Spanish TV, in which the presenter Dolors Elias interviewed me in my rural weaving studio in north Spain.  Being as scatterbrained as I am (sometimes) I had thought the programme went out at 9.30 in the evening on Spanish TV instead of the morning, but no, it went out in the morning so I missed it.   Never mind!  I don´t even watch television  normally and I´m sure that watching myself on it would make me cringe anyway.   The results of the programme are amazing though – I´ve already enjoyed a phone call from Tomas, a professional weaver in the Canary Islands, who called me spontaneously after seeing the programme.

 

 

 

Danish Tapestry exhibition catalogue

Danish Tapestry exhibition catalogue

I also received an email from Alvaro Perez in Valencia, who wanted information about tapestry weaving for his wife.  I´m not a tapestry weaver, nor do I know much about it – as I weave with floor looms or table looms with 4 – 8 shafts, not tapestry looms.  But for Alvaro and his wife, and anyone else interested in tapestry weaving,  here is a little information on a tremendous exhibition which was held in Denmark this year and which features large-scale work by some of the best tapestry weavers in the country.  I only saw the exhibition via the exhibition catalogue but I thought the work was breathtaking.  Lluis, my basketmaking partner, who DID get to see the exhibition (he was teaching a Catalan basketry course in Denmark at the time, at the workshop of Jette Melgren), said that the work was ten times better than the catalogue.  For anyone who is interested, here is the email address to write to in order to ask about acquiring a copy.  I don´t think it was very expensive but it has an excellent English translation and pretty good photos of a piece of work by each of the 25 textile artists reprsented.  Email for contacting the exhibition organisers: 

mail@danskgobelinkunst.dk.  The catalogue title is  – Dansk Gobelinkunst 2009, published by the Johannes Larsen Museet.

 

 


 

Well, bye for now,

P.S.  Is anyone actually reading this blog?  I know it´s early days and I´m a novice blogger but I haven´t seen any comments yet and I´d love to know if anyone has found it yet so please do say hello…


 


 


 


 


Warm Winter Scarf Project Part I: Natural Dyeing


 

My students & I during the course

My students & I during the course

I´ve been doing quite a bit of dyeing this week for a special scarf project.  Here´s how it started… 

September 2009 -I give a natural dyeing course to a group of very enthusiastic students in AC Textile Studio and I end up with small quantities of some of the woollen yarn samples.  They´re a nice reminder of the fun we had during the course … but such small quantities of yarns – (about 20 – 25g of each colour) are no use for a weave project – I´ll have to dye  more yarn in co-ordinating colours. 







 

lana teñida con tintes naturales en el curso

September dye course results


 


 

December 2009 – I dye about 1k (over 2lbs) of yarn with onion skins and brazilwood dye, darkening the onion colour with iron where necessary in order to get a range of colours which can work well together in a design – which can also use up the small quantities of yarns from the course.  

 

 

 

 

 Here are some photos of the processes involved in dyeing the yarn:

wound skeins

undyed yarn


Wind the yarn into skeins – then Dyeing…
mordanting (fixing) the wool

mordanting (fixing) the wool

inspecting dyed yarns

inspecting dyed yarns

Natural Linen Yarn for eco-towels, traditional farm sacks and scarves


 


 


 

camino de tierra de anna champeney estudio textil

camino de tierra de anna champeney estudio textil

November 2009!

  A new order of soft grey and creamy white linen yarn arrives on a pallet, wheeled along the last 50m of the grassy track which leads to my Textile Studio in Cristosende, rural north Spain.

 

 

 


Anna with linen yarn

Anna with linen yarn


Some of the natural linen yarn will be dyed by hand with natural dyes to be woven up as limited edition linen scarves.  But the white and grey un-dyed linen is ideal for the hand-woven linen towels, flannels, cushions and rustic Galician farm sacks and bags.  Dyeing all the yarn myself, naturally, (and then weaving by hand) means more environmentally-friendly textiles and I no longer buy chemically-coloured linen.  This, in turn, means I can buy the natural linen in bulk directly from my supplier.  Buying direct saves a little money – and in turn, enables me to pass on this saving to my clients when they buy my work.


 

Handspun yarn in Galicia – Up until around the 1950s many rural Galician women spindle spun their own linen yarn by hand which was completely organic and ecological but sadly this is simply not economically viable for professional weavers today.  Using industrial yarns is not always an easy option either though, for it is becoming increasingly hard for hand-weavers to source quality linen yarns today at reasonable prices.  Most yarn companies generally only sell in industrial quantities, but importing from specialist, small-scale hand-weaving yarn suppliers (often in countries such as Britain or Finland) can work out very expensive.


 

I´m lucky that my yarn supplier, Mario Monfort, based in Catalunya, is willing to sell natural linen to me in “small quantities” (about 15 kilos).  This is more than enough for my limited studio production.  To give you an idea of what 15 kilos of linen yarn can make – I could produce 85 large linen scarves, 90 linen hand-towels, 300 miniature farm sacklets or …. 500 flannels !  That means weeks of patient dyeing, loom preparation, weaving and cloth finishing.


 

linen towels toallas de lino

linen flannels and hand-towels

If you think I use just one kind of grey and white linen in my textiles then you may be surprised to know that I have over 10 different thicknesses and qualities.  Choosing the right linen yarn for each weaving project is very important;  even small changes in thickness can make a lot of difference to a hand-woven textile.  I use plied yarns (2 or more strands) for greater flexibility but I love singles (one strand yarn) for their sheen and liveliness.  The more twist a linen yarn has the stronger they are but  are less soft.  So they are ideal for farm sacks but not so useful for soft, draping scarves.  I always think carefully about which yarns to use for each of my designs and the combination of different yarns is one way I make the textiles unique to my Textile Studio.


 

workshop kitten examines the yarn

workshop kitten examines the yarn

But, as you can see from the photo, our workshop kitten is a rather too fond of linen yarn herself, so I´d better stop “spinning yarns” and tidy it away….


 

FACTFILE

Natural linen textiles woven by hand in Galicia – Anna Champeney Estudio Textil –  www.annachampeney.com and www.artesaniadegalicia.org (in Galician and Spanish – click on catalogs en liña)

Linen Yarn for Weavers – Available by post from Anna Champeney Estudio Textil (payment by bank transfer or sterling cheque).  The Studio usually has about 10 different thicknesses of natural and white linens including fine singles (ideal for collapse weave) and finer numbers, including 12/2, for linen towels or curtaining.  The studio does not stock thicker linen yarns for carpet warp, however.   The studio can make up a sample card for you which costs 5 euros. 

 Loom weaving with linen –  So you think weaving with linen is difficult?  Anna Champeney, the maker of hand-woven textiles in north Spain, has successfully taught hand-weaving with linen – (even to complete beginners)!  Contact the studio for details about holiday tuition available for guests and holiday rentals at – Casa dos Artesans, the charming self-catering cottage situated next to the studio in an idyllically-situated Spanish village.