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2013/09/28

Not-Laharya: A Matter of Taste

I became less and less, (is that "increasingly less", or "decreasingly"?) attracted to the colors in this warp so it took me a while to thread. (Plus, I weeded for an hour and a half three days in a row, and I was shocked how tired I got; I used to garden in seven-to-nine-hour stretches.) So far I'm not keen on the weft colors I sampled, but then I saw them mainly under florescent light last night; they offend me less in natural light today. I hope to sample with more purple, light green and gray wefts this afternoon.
Meanwhile, I have been thinking about drafts in this post, (I don't like either, to tell the truth,) and reflecting on how my taste has changed, at least for the time being.

I used to love regular, fine, intricate drafts like the first one in the post, and fussy patterns one can make in networked twills. I wouldn't say I dislike them now, but the intricate regular patterns in two colors or values, I've seen enough of for now.

Dot and I were wondering why my taste has changed so quickly/noticeably; whether it's because of my collage experience; of having seen many paintings I didn't used to pay attention to, of the Cubists and Surrealists persuasions; or having thought so much about color planes via my Cubism class. What I would like to see in my cloths are bigger and distinct color patches and bigger graphic/geometric motifs. I think.

I only have vague, blurry visions of what I think I'd like, but one of the ways I thought to try is to use the tapestry technique and, say, have three separate color areas horizontally, in erratic shapes and sizes. Something like this, though more organic:
Unfortunately the current warp is not suitable for this experiment. The colors are mixed randomly, in parts frequently, and some of the yarns I used are outright unsuitable as warps, too soft and prone to break, (Mom and I discussed how these should be used only as wefts in Feb,) but oh, the red was so saturated and I couldn't help myself. Anyhoo, some of these warp yarns wouldn't tolerate the handling required in tapestry technique, at least not in the way I do it. My next warp idea may be more suitable?

4 comments:

  1. Maybe it is just time for a change? You've given a lot of time and attention to one area and now you are ready for another? I must say that I am all in favour of large graphic shapes and distinct areas of colour, but who knows when I may suddenly reach saturation point and be off in another direction...

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  2. Yes, maybe time for a change. I used to love advancing twills, loved the bigger patterns those drafts produced, even on my measly 8-shaft. Might have kept on in this direction had I not stopped weaving for good. Have a great weekend!

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  3. I wrote a comment, then lost it. It basically just said to go with what feels right, you can always come back to the complex drafts if/when you're ready to.

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  4. Oh, no, you need voice recog, Sonya, for my sake if not yours!

    But yes, I agree with you all - I'm going with the gut feeling because it's much easier than going against. And if I end up with a bunch of uglies, you all might have to wear them and walk around in your perspective towns! Hee hee.

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