Monday, May 16, 2016

Luigi's Locks Grass-Green Bouclé Scarf

Dimensions: 8" wide by 72" long, plus 4" fringe at each end
Completed: February 2016
The raw material

I wove this scarf in a straightforward plain weave on my rigid heddle loom. I didn't think it was worth trying to do anything fancy with the weave because I thought the bouclé structure of the yarn would probably obliterate any pattern I attempted. And, more importantly, the yarn was so beautiful I really wanted it to be the focus here, not the weave.
 
The warp and weft are both done in the same yarn: a hand-dyed grass-green bouclé mohair yarn called "Luigi's Locks" from Yellow Dog Farm, which I bought at the Vermont Sheep and Woolcraft Fair last summer. The yarn has little streaks of darker green and lighter yellow-green throughout.

A sample I wove on a piece
of cardboard to see if the 7.5 epi
gauge would look all right
Luigi's Locks
on the loom


 
This scarf probably used about 400-425 yards of wool; I had two skeins of 225 yards each, and I ended up using roughly one and two-thirds of the skeins.

When I measured its gauge, it looked like Luigi's Locks was roughly a worsted weight  I used a 7.5 dent reed and tried to keep to roughly 7.5 ppi so that it could be a pretty loose, open weave; I did this both so the fabric wouldn't be so stiff, and also so there would be plenty of room for the little bouclé loops to poke out in all directions. I warped the loom with 62 ends of 8.5 yards each.

The scarf was about 8.25" wide on the loom, and about 8" off the loom. I wove the scarf out to about 74" long, which only ended up shrinking a tiny bit to about 72" long off the loom; maybe the bouclé loops helped it keep its size off the loom. I left 4" of fringe on both ends, which I tied off in groups of four warps each.

The final product (although this is
not what the color really looks like)
Close-up of the finished fabric










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