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  1. #1
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    21st April 07
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    There's a lady in BC who teaches hand-weaving of tartans. She used to operate out of a B&B, but it's been sold, and she's looking for another venue. If you're interested, it might be worth keeping an eye on her website to see when she resumes.

  2. #2
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    26th July 07
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    O' Neille, my girlfriend wants to know how wide your loom is, and what you mean by weaving a double width? Forget the double width question, we figured it out, and it is feasible, if ungainly.
    Last edited by ChromeScholar; 2nd August 07 at 02:58 PM.

  3. #3
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    26th July 07
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    One thing we discussed last night was actually widening the loom we have now by enough to do kilt-width fabric, say 30 or 36 inches.

    And there's a question all you weavers and kilt-makers can answer for me. How wide a fabric do you actually need to sew a kilt?

  4. #4
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    30th November 04
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    The absolute minimum is the overall length of the kilt from the top edge to the bottom. Most kilts are in the range of 22-25". You'd have to be pretty tall to need a kilt longer than that. A kiltmaker typically uses the strip cut off from the selvedge edge to make the top band so that the tartan can be matched across the apron, so a kiltmaker uses more like 25-28" of width. But, that's not really necessary if you have a bare minimum of width. You can always piece a bunch of weft-wise strips if you absolutely have to. Your belt will cover the top band seam anyway.

    The only way I know of to weave a double width on a hand loom is to double the ppi and set up the loom so that you weave the top half of the cloth on one pass and the bottom half on the other, with the weft thread turning and going back at the fabric midpoint. It's complicated, but it can be done. That's a lot of threads per inch, though, and the web will be _really heavy_.

    Barb

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by ChromeScholar View Post
    O' Neille, my girlfriend wants to know how wide your loom is, and what you mean by weaving a double width? Forget the double width question, we figured it out, and it is feasible, if ungainly.
    My loom is 36" and my weaving instructor has taught me how to set it up to do a double width. When I was learning I was more consistent weaving the double. If I'm not relaxed I weave single width canvas. Depending on the thread I loose 6-10% during the finishing process. O'Neille

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