Weaving Loom: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created Page + Added Basic Sections/Info)
(Added some more links under the "External Links" section)
Line 14: Line 14:


=External Links=
=External Links=
*
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loom The Wikipedia Page On Looms]
**[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaving The Wikipedia Page On Weaving] (Good Backround Information)
**[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_textile_manufacturing The Wikipedia Page On Textile Manufacturing Terms] (Useful for Decifering all the odd Terms)
**[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacquard_machine The Wikipedia Page On Jacquard Machines] (Bit of [[Terminolgy Hell]] here, supposedly most modern systems use a common loom, with an add on Jacquard (Machine) ?  I need to look into this more to be certain.


[[Category: Threadwork]]
[[Category: Threadwork]]

Revision as of 21:03, 2 September 2023

Basics

  • This Page Aims to Overview the Basic Concept of Looms, Typical Machines in Use, and Potential Avenues of Development for OSE
  • A Weaving Loom Essentially Amounts to Device to Hold Threads Allowing for Woven Textiles to Be Produced in an Easier Manner
  • Most are also Automated nowadays
  • They hold Threads under Tension which are called the Warp
  • The Weft is then Woven through the many Warps
  • The most simple implementations can be made from 2x4s and basic bolts etc, and simply have a Comb, a Mechanism to Hold the Warp Apart, and a Shuttle Thrown Back and Forth to move the Weft through the Warp
  • More Sophisticated Machines can Manipulate the Location of the Warp Threads to allow for more Weave Patterns than a simple Plain Weave
  • Also one can either manually, or via a variety of mechanisms swap the Weft Thread to another Color/Material Mid-Weave allowing for simple multicolored Bulk Fabric all the way to Tapestries / Woven Fabric Books (Interesting Concept, Doesn't Seem Too Common, and is somewhat Obsolete, but for Waterproof Books and Waterproof Charts may be of interest) (In 1886 Someone Made a Woven Silk Prayerbook Entirly by a Jacquard Loom which was one of the famous instances of this)
  • Semi-Automated Looms, where the "Shuttle" is manually "thrown" but the Warp is adjusted by machine may be of interest for prototyping, especially with E-Textiles and other novel applications of weaving

Internal Links

External Links