Dimensional Cloth Workshop – Blog Post

We Lunatics have gone to a lot of conferences over the 30+ years that we have been in business.  However, it isn’t very often that we give ourselves the time to participate in the classes offered at the conferences. This year at IWC in Logan Utah, we sprang our fearless leader, Katzy, from booth duty so she could take Denise Kovnat’s Dimensional Cloth workshop.  Let her tell you about a few of the wonderful things she learned along the way.

By Katzy Luhring

Denise Kovnat’s Dimensional Cloth workshop at IWC was a fabulous opportunity to experiment with interesting yarns and learn some new things!

Denise asked all the class participants to choose a project from her book:  "Weaving Outside the Box, 12 Projects for Creating Dimensional Cloth".  I chose project #1 the Deflected-Doubleweave Scarf on four shafts.  To be perfectly honest, I chose it because the project didn’t have too many ends, it used 10/2 mercerized cotton yarns and would fit on the 4-shaft Wolf Pup Loom that we had room to take with us to Logan.  Seemed like a perfect fit all the way around!

Thyme and 5 Blue

I wanted to spend the workshop time making samples and learn more about elastic yarn during the workshop.  To give myself plenty of warp for playing, I wound a 6-yard warp of 10/2 Tubular Spectrum Thyme and 5 Blue.  This was twice the warp length that Denise recommends in her book. I knew I would have plenty of warp to experiment to my heart's desire.

What is Colcolastic Cotton yarn?

Denise’s instructions call for Colcolastic yarn for one of the weft yarns.  This is a yarn that I was unfamiliar with, but after a quick internet search, I found it at Lone Star Loom Room.  When I received the yarn (in a very short amount of time), I discovered that the yarn is a two-stranded yarn:  One strand is 20/2 cotton, and one strand is a thin elastic, and these two yarns are wound together onto the spool.  I could make my own yarn by using one strand of 20/2 Tubular Spectrum mercerized cotton yarn and combining it with any of our thin elastic yarns:  Ramie, Cotton, Silk.  The color possibilities are endless!

And how did those two yarns wind onto a bobbin?  No problem there.  I have since used both a hand winder and an electric bobbin winder to wind the spools from two cones and have not had any trouble with the yarns getting tangled either as I wound onto the spools or while I was weaving.  Want to see how the two yarns wind together?  Here is a link to a video that we posted on Youtube of 20/2 Tubular Spectrum Yarn winding with Elastic Cotton YarnClick Here for the video.

Mercerized and Elastics

Play Time!

3 days of class trying different yarns and learning how the weave structure works and interacts with the weft yarns?  It was heavenly!   I tried elastic ramie, elastic silk, elastic cotton both by themselves and with cotton yarns.  I experimented with weft yarn colors to see how the two layers interacted.  So much experimenting and so many things to try!

Scarf Samples

Not so plain weave.

IWC Scarf End Section unwashed

Denise has designed an interesting project…the first 18” is woven double weave with a top layer and a bottom layer.  When I first warped the loom and sleyed the reed, I couldn’t understand how we were going to get a functional fabric in those first 18” from the big spaces that are in between the yarns on each layer:  There are gaps of about ¼ inch!  I trusted Denise's instructions and wove the fabric with the weft yarn floating across those gaps.  When the fabric is washed, the warp yarn shifts over to fill the gaps and you get an interesting, almost plainweave fabric with lots of drape.

IWC Scarf End Section washed

Splash! Now, to make things go bump!

The center section of the scarf contains the elastic and cotton weft.   There is a nice texture to the fabric while on the loom, but it is relatively flat.  And the fabric remains flat when you take it off the loom.  The magic really happens when the fabric gets wet! When washed, the elastic in the weft shrinks up and takes the warp yarns along for a ride, creating ridges in the fabrics.  The 20/2 weft yarns bubble up and make a loopy texture on one side of the fabric.  You can stretch the fabric out to see how it originally looked, but when you let it go, the pleats reappear.  Magical!

IWC Scarf Center Section washed
IWC Scarf Center Section unwashed

To the Loom!

When I left Logan, my brain was bursting with new ideas, and I have been spending lots of time at the loom finishing up the first batch of scarves and working on new ones!  Thanks Denise, for a wonderful workshop!

Finished but unwashed scarf
Simply Irresistible Scarf

3 thoughts on “Dimensional Cloth Workshop – Blog Post”

  1. Great article. I bought some elastic yarn at Convergence and haven’t had the guts to try it. You have inspired me to try something new.-Wyatt Nocera

  2. Thanks so much for this article!! I have tried to take Denise’s class twice but have always had a conflict. Looking forward to trying this technique with the Lunatic Fringe Yarns!

  3. Katzy,
    I was in the workshop and appreciate you sharing your samples and the finished scarf. We also appreciated all the Gevolve yarns you brought in for us to sample.
    Suzanne Chappell
    Redlands, CA

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