I cleaned up the loom after removing the first finished weaving. I removed one of the 4-harness blocks and used the warp board that our son and I built 15 years ago to start a new weaving. I decided on dishtowels using #5 and #3 cotton.


I chained the warp while trying to maintain the cross. This is of note because I’d not chained a warp in over 12 years, so it was a lot of virtual hair pulling. I ended up losing about 3 yards of the warp because the cotton didn’t want to play well.
I slowly sleyed the reed and secured the warp onto a shed stick.





Threading the heddles went fairly smoothly and I enjoyed relearning the process. The biggest difference for me was that this was not my Nana’s antique rug loom, so it was easier.



The warp is ready to tie onto the back apron! This is a very interesting process when there’s a warp puddle waiting in a feed tub.



Tying the warp onto the back rear/back apron and beaming it onto the rear warp beam progressed fairly well. It’s slow and steady work and rushing isn’t necessary or desired.





It’s time to have a cup of tea and begin the weaving!!



That’s it for now.
Get busy with creating whatn you like, want, or need. Quit sitting on our brain and get busy!