15 hours ago
Sunday, 8 February 2009
Tabby and twill
This blanket is one of a small collection we have woven by Keith Stow, a weaver living in Sowerby Bridge, Yorkshire, who I understand finally retired about 3 years ago. I wish I'd bought more of his beautiful blankets! I also love wearing a couple of hooded jackets sewn up from a similar fabric to the blankets. All 100 per cent wool.
The label he wove under was "Stows of Sowerby". I have an old "Craft Trail" booklet for the south Pennines with a page about the business. Keith Stow had worked as a spinning overlooker until he was made redundant in 1980. He and his wife were living in a farmhouse with a large barn, suitable for setting up his weaving business. It is my understanding from a conversation I had with the intermediary I bought the blankets from - at a Derbyshire crafts centre - that he started hand weaving, but the popularity of the blankets was such that it justified getting a large Italian mechanical loom, and in fact the craft booklet says he had three working looms.
It was discovering these blankets - I think probably 8 years ago - that caused me first to look at a woven cloth and wonder about how it was designed and made. The Craft Trail booklet tells me that they are based on a blanket that Keith's wife, April, inherited from a Swiss grandfather. They are a bit different to anything I had ever seem before. They are woven in 4/4 diagonal twill and fulled. The weft colours are in bands, the blanket above has five different weft colours but an extraordinary number and range of colours in the warp. I think it probably that he used production line ends from local mills.
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12 comments:
What a gorgeous cat, I mean blanket. I knew the cats were gorgeous already... I love the colours - both warp and weft - they are very unusual.
I agree with you (and the cats) the blankets are beautiful. It makes me wish I had a much wider loom!
Funny how some things are just the wrong time, isn't it?
Gorgeous cats - and blankets. They make me wish I were able to make a living making them.
I'm not even a cat person, and I love the pictures of the cats on the blanket!
Those blankets are gorgeous!! I bought my big loom because I want to make some blankets and throws - so it's great to see such beautiful examples of handwoven blankets. (Not that anything I make will rival that!!)
Thanks for sharing them!
Sue
I shall pass on the compliments to the cats - after having a big black neutered male cat for 15 years (the late and handsome Oscar) I am continually surprised that these girl cats are very girlie and very pretty. Annie even shows a preference for pink cat toys!!!
Regarding weaving blankets, I hope to weave a blanket on my loom someday by the doubleweave double-width technique, Rachel Brown explains how to do this in "The Weaving, Spinning and Dyeing Book".
Maybe if I buy a couple of lovely wool blankets, cats will come camouflage themselves in my domestic environment?
That's an interesting story about your look at buying the weaving business. Even with plenty of capital and a good plan, it's hard to keep something like this going; it's as if you need entrepreneurial fairy dust in addition to everything else.
Fabulous blankets ! Makes me want to have a go at weaving ! Cats seem to appreciate them too
Trapunto - fairy dust is so much "being in the right place at the right time" and real magic if/when it does happen ;)
Barbara, I'm delighted by your comment as it tells me I have succeeded in creating for you the same discovery that I had when I first saw these blankets. Thanks for letting me know.
Oh my goodness, have a look at this post from my blog from June 2006 (you'll have to scroll down to the very last post). Coincidence or what?
Anyone want to buy a loom?
Ra - thanks for the comment - I read your post from June 2006 about visiting Keith Stow. Those lovely yarns you bought look rather like some of the colours in my blankets!
The blankets are wonderful - and the cats too, of course. I have woven several blankets and found the results very satisfying. Wish I had a place for my big temporarily retired Glimakra loom.
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