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Monday, 13 October, 2008
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School Workshops
An exciting way to learn more about cloth making and wool processes in
one of our School Workshop visits.
Click here for more
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Booking Info
All the information you need about booking a School visit using one of our teachers packs.
Click here for more
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Warper
Making up a warp was originally done
by the weaver. On a vertical loom, the warps were wound around
the top bar and held under tension by baked clay loom weights.
On a horizontal loom, the warp stored on the beam at the back is
gradually unrolled as the cloth is woven and wound onto the front
roller.
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Illustration of Peg Warping |
Before 1750, warping was done using pegs on a wall. The thread
was looped alternately over and under the pegs to accommodate a
measured length. Where the yarn crossed between the pegs, called ‘the
lace’, a thread was tied to
hold all the warp threads together. The warp could be lifted
off and made into a loose chain (using chain stitch) to be carried
home by the weaver. The warp is often called the chain and the
weft, the abb.
By 1800, warp yarn was measured on a vertical
warping bar before being wound onto the warp beam. This bar was
a large rotating framework with a measured dimension.
A large drum called a warping mill replaced the bar, from which the threads could
be wound onto the warp beam.
The warp yarn was sometimes treated
with size, for strength and then dried before use. |
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Vertical Warping Bar |
The warper not only had to get his lengths correct
but he also had to arrange the threads, called ends, in the right
order when patterned cloth was being woven. Warping became a specialised
job as warps got longer and more complicated on power looms.
On a big loom, a warp may consist of between 5 and
10 thousand threads (ends) divided into sections of 200 ends.
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Leonard Bates using
a Warping Bar |
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