Maybe us Yanks have the good technology, but you rebs have the leadership on the field of battle. Or so the rumor says,
is it true? A tater sack..that is so sad.
But, I bet you it is some sort of sneaky rebel trick. And don't be wrapping your secret plans around some cigars. It didn't work too well the first time.
Darn, I said too much.
Okay, kids, a few more shots of the weaving process. This is the last set I will post until I finish the fabric. Shoot, I should not be up past midnight messing around with looms, and I am going to feel it in the morning!
The first shot shows the threads, all 140 of them, in the heddles and the loom completely set up.
The second shot shows the threads from the view of sitting in front of the loom, with two of the tredles depressed. You can see the boat shuttle in the top right part of the shot. It contains a bobbin, and I shove the thing to the left (and the right, and the left, and the right), over and over. As the fabric grows, I depress a foot pedal and a break, and it feeds me more threads, through the bobbins and reed. The tension is constantly changing slightly as your fabric grows, as that shifts the area the shuttle can travel through, so it all has to be factored in.
Finallly, you can see me beating a weft thread into the work. It pivots at the bottom, so you can pull it foward toward you.
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