Wednesday, 20 May 2020

My 3 favourite tools


The top tool is a threading hook - the red bulbous end is wooden and the long needle like end is metal with a tiny hook at the very tip. The needle slides through the eye of the heddle to catch a warp end. I then slide it back through the heddle and move onto the next warp end. I often tend to hold the threading hook in my teeth as I quickly adjust heddle’s and warp – there is something really satisfying about the metallic taste in my mouth alongside the textured warp yarns in my fingers. The middle tool is called a shuttle. It is wooden, with rollers along the bottom that enables the shuttle to glide easily through the weave shed. This is a very tactile object which makes a really rewarding clunky sound when it is pushed through the shed. The shuttle holds the weft yarn that is interlaced at right angles with the warp yarn to create the fabric. The shuttle is a tool that is in constant use during the hand weaving process it is a very personal object that many weavers often adapt and personalise to suit their weaving habits and needs. The bottom tool is an aluminium ‘Fish’ or Reed Hook that has a hook at either end for ease of use. It is a very light, narrow tool that is slotted through the read dents to catch the warp and to pull it back through the dent. This Fish is slightly bent at one end. I think this is down to me being right-handed and threading the loom from left to right – I must often put pressure on the end of this hook when pulling it back through the dent this has led to the develop of the slight curve. Another example of how weaving tools mould to the weaver.