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Check out these different types of weavers .

Welcome. Check out these different types of weavers. Weaving.

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Check out these different types of weavers .

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  1. Welcome Check out these different types of weavers.

  2. Weaving

  3. Weaving is an ancient craft that humans developed to meet the basic needs of clothing and shelter. Recent investigations have uncovered evidence of weaving in Europe as early as 27,000 years ago. The craft developed into an art form that has flourished in every culture around the world. Weaving is truly one of the “common threads” of human kind.

  4. Weaving around the World

  5. Peru – South America

  6. The artistic quality of Peruvian Andes textiles has been a source of awe for centuries. Intricate patterns and vibrant natural colors have made the piece collector’s items since the time of the Spanish conquistadors of the 15th century. In the days of the Incas, the status of a person was obvious by the weave of the clothes he wore. The tighter the weave and more complicated the pattern, the longer it took to make and the greater the pride of the wearer.

  7. Maya - Guatemala

  8. In Guatemala, weavers create complex, bright-colored blankets and clothing, including shirts called huipiles (whee peels), belts they sometimes wrap around their heads like turbans and skirts.

  9. Ghana – Kente Cloth

  10. The most well-known type of West African cloth is probably “kente” cloth. It is woven by Ashanti of Ghana. (highly prestigious silk cloth, made exclusively for the king and his court)

  11. American Weaving

  12. Colonial Weaving

  13. Weaving was not allowed by the British in Colonial America. Colonist were supposed to send unfinished goods like cotton and flax to Britain and buy finished cloth back from England. Nonetheless, many people wove cloth in Colonial America

  14. Navajo

  15. The Navajo are known for weaving beautiful wool rugs, blankets, and tapestries. Traditional, these rugs feature symbolic geometric shapes.

  16. Chilkat– Northwest Coast Indians

  17. Chilkat blankets were traditionally woven by the Tlingit Indians out of mountain goat hair and cedar bark. They were five-sided, deeply fringed and were worn as capes during important ceremonies. The Chilkat blanket-weaving tradition largely died out a hundred years ago, and the antique ones now cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

  18. Modern Weavers

  19. Gunta Stolzi

  20. Anni Albers

  21. “Spaghetti” by Courtney Puckett

  22. Jeanne Steiner

  23. WEAVING You can start with PAPER WEAVING

  24. Weaving Projects

  25. Kind of Looms Floor Loom Table Loom Inkle Loom Tapestry Loom frame work or machine for interweaving yarns into fabric

  26. Circular Loom

  27. Kid Friendly Looms Lap Loom Peg Loom Cardboard box Loom Pot Loom

  28. Pot holder

  29. Cardboard Loom Lesson Plans

  30. Soda Straw Weaving

  31. Popsicle Stick Loom

  32. Finger weaving

  33. Friendship Bracelet

  34. Burlap Weaving(“Un-weaving”)

  35. Common expressions origins in WEAVING • Shuttle – is a tool that carries the weft back and forth across the warp and a space shuttle goes back and forth from space. • At loose ends – is unfocused and confused and it comes from loose warp ends and a problems they present to the weaver. • New lease on life – means getting a fresh start and it derived from a warp lease that is used to separate warp ends to keep them organized.

  36. Vocabulary

  37. Warp – lengthwise threads on the loom Weft – the crosswise yarn of a fabric (also called “woof”)

  38. Shuttles Rag and Rug Shuttles Stick Shuttle Ski Shuttles • a device which holds the weft thread during the weaving process

  39. Beater used to push woven thread into place

  40. Weaving Vocabulary • Shed – the opening created when alternate warp threads are raised and lowered • Tabby – a simple weave where the weft alternates over one and under one warp end • Weaving – to make a fabric by interlacing warp and weft threads

  41. HAVE FUN

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