Sponsored by TWIST - Tablet Weavers International Studies & Techniques
I feel maybe I have inadvertently contributed to the missed hole confusion in calling the warp-twined structure in which one or two holes in each tablet is unthreaded a "Missed hole TECHNIQUE ". (see figs 71 and 72 in TTW) It is really one application of a Missed Hole THREADING. Such a threading can lead to several STRUCTURES depending on the TECHNIQUE used. 1) with a one-colour warp and continuous uni-directional turning of all tablets or blocks of tablets, it produces a warp-twined textile with visible wefts showing in transverse and diagonal grooves. (see Plate 61 in TTW) Still used in N African bands made from synthetic yarns. 2) with a two colour warp, specially arranged in each tablet with relation to the missed hole, and with more complex turning sequences, it produces areas of 'hopsack' (in one colour, the other colour FLOATING in long loops on the back) and of warp twining where the two colours form fine diagonal lines. This is the structure I show in Figs 129,130 +surrounding and very detailed text in TTW, which mentions its origin in Iceland; and which Guido Gehlhaar has exploited so skilfully. So the two structures are completely different.. one a reversible warp- twining, the other a one-sided combination of hopsack and warp-twining. They just happen to both depend on leaving one hole per tablet unthreaded. When writing TTW, I began organising the many possibilities by the way the tablets were threaded... (so the two above structures would have been classified and described together) but I soon realised that the only logical way was to organise by the final structure. (Maybe slightly influenced by Irene Emery's classification of all textiles by structure, not method of production, in her great 'Primary Structure of Textiles'). But in my Appendix 1, you will see 'Techniques Classified by Threading', where the above two missed hole threadings, PLUS three others are listed, with references to their description in the book. So I feel it is misleaing to group the above two structures under one name, as suggested by GG Though I do know the names with which I christened structures in TTW are often cumbersome mouthfuls! Excuse the SHOUTING in the above,,, but in TW, it is so important that threading , technique and structure are always clearly differentiated. Peter Collingwood blincoe's newlands lane nayland colchester CO6 4JJ UK tel/fax 01206 262 401 http://www.petercollingwood.co.uk Send private reply to peter collingwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----------------------------------------------------------- To stop receiving tabletweaving (not tabletweaving-digest), send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message: unsubscribe tabletweaving. To stop receiving tabletweaving-digest, see the end of a digest.
