Dano, Ryan, thanks! I try.
Buck, that is not a loom. It is a warping board. What that is is a large square frame with pegs. You use it to measure the warp length. For instance, you need a thread 85" long. You then tie that thread to one peg, and loop the thread on any of the pegs - called the warp path.
Why you do this is so you can create the warp chains, which are the things in the last photo, bundles of 20 threads each. This is just to keep the threads in order when I set up the actual loom. The threads travel through a metal screen called a reed, and then through metal wires called heddles, then finally, to the back of the loom, where a round back beam with a ratchet device to give all the threads the tension you need. The heddles move up and down in a certain order, and are controlled by foot pedals called treadles. So, you push down on treadle one and three, every other thread moves up, and you send the weft thread between those threads. You lift two and four, and the weft is sent through those threads. They all interlock, and there you have fabric.
Did that make sense? I will show pics of the loom once it is set up, and as things progress. It will make sense then.
Dane