Self-Sufficiency: Spinning, Dyeing & Weaving: Essential Guide for Beginners (IMM Lifestyle Books) How to Grow and Harvest Your Own Homemade Fibers, Comb, Card, and Prepare Them, and 4 Starter Projects
Discover age-old techniques and enjoy making your own beautiful, all-natural fabrics! Learn how to make your own homegrown natural fabrics to spin, dye, and weave, with this comprehensive guide! Inside this book, expert textile arts instructor Penny Walsh reveals everything you need to know to start making your own high-quality custom fabrics. Learn where different fibers come from, how to grow and harvest your own animal or vegetable fibers, and how to prepare them for spinning. The principles of spindle and spinning wheel spinning are covered, along with home dyeing using natural dyestuffs you can grow yourself, and hand weaving with or without a loom. Four simple projects—a rug, cushion cover, scarf, and hat—are provided to help you put your newly learned skills to the test. With the mighty textile industry able to produce cloth more quickly than ever before, and stores selling furnishing and clothing textiles in every town center, why engage in the labor-intensive and time-consuming process of making your own textiles? The answer is a desire for self-sufficiency! Nothing could be more different from modern factory-made cloth than creating your own unique handmade textiles. Although manufactured textiles employ some of the most sophisticated techniques of any modern industry, using huge quantities of energy and creating waste and pollution, the entire fabric production method can be done by hand at home, using almost no energy but your own. If you want to learn how to be fully self-sufficient in making your own textiles, this book will show you how. Start making your own textiles from scratch, with Spinning, Dyeing and Weaving !
Nice and fairly thorough (for such a thin volume) book that covers fibre type and the processing, spinning, dying and weaving of said fibres.
A nice little reference book that goes into detailed process recipes for specific dyes and mordants. I particularly liked the alternative fibres, and might hopefully try some dying at some point.
I spin yarn (on a spindle) and dye yarn, most recently with natural plant dyes, so I found this book endearing from that perspective. It's written in a very straightforward way, and from a less modern perspective. The tips and information are given simply, and there's an assumption in the tone that these skills are very important. It was hard not to compare the information to all we have available to us now though. I did like being able to nod my head at some of the facts and advice (things I've seen elsewhere, but it's a good reminder of how longstanding this information is). I don't currently weave, but I learned a good bit about why certain weaving techniques are used to create a fabric and to preserve it.
This book gives a nice overview of what it takes to produce textiles from the ground up. Most of the topics aren't delved into with enough detail to go from ground to finished product. It's definitely enough to be inspiring, though, and it's a great launch pad for a fiber adventure. I'm not entirely new to fiber arts and I still learned some new things and am inspired for several projects, including growing some plants for dye and using an old picture frame to weave a wall-hanging from some of my small amounts of art yarn.
A good over-view of the topics, I think, but I would probably do more research before attempting anything but the simplest instructions.
Also, I'm a little confused by the instruction that cotton has to be spun on a short draw; I learnt on cotton when I was a kid, and short draw never went well, long draw with a lot of twist was the way to go.
A nice little book, good as an overview of the basics of spinning (both on a drop spindle and a wheel), dyeing and weaving, all based around the idea of self-sufficiency (i.e. very much focused on doing it yourself, from preparing fleeces to making looms). Probably too simplistic to learn from scratch from, but a good basic introduction.