Crystal prepares the wool for spinning
4 days before she arrived, Crystal asked if she could spend a couple of weeks with me learning how to spin Chilkat warp and begin weaving a child-size Chilkat robe – it was spur of the moment – holy moly! Okay, we’ll squeeze in a week before the arrival of Vanessa who is scheduled to arrive a week after Crystal.
The following are photos of Crystal’s process of preparing the cedar bark, the merino wool, spinning the two, acquiring her weaving loom and dressing her loom starting her borders.
Splitting cedar bark while tanning
Sunny work space
Proud of her very first ball of thigh-spun warp
Creating a skein of her warp on the umbrella swift, she counts a 35-yard ball ready to wash
Crystal is happy with her apron-size/child-size Chilkat robe loom, she knows she is blessed
With cotton twine, Crystal anchors down the heading cord
Using a “warp stick” fashioned after master weaver Jennie Thlunaut, Crystal continues to “dress” her loom
Weaving late into the night, Crystal has got the “weaver’s bug!” – weave till ya drop!
Crystal weaves the first anchoring row and first rows of white
The beauty of virgin warp on a virgin weaving loom!
Honing her skills in applying Jennie Thlunaut’s unique fingering technique, Crystal glides through the warp weaving the black border
Turning the corners using Jennie’s fingering technique allows the weaver to turn the corners gracefully
Chilkat weaving instructor Clarissa Rizal with two apprentices, Crystal Rogers from Juneau, Alaska and Vanessa Morgan from Kincolith, British Columba, Canada