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WEAVING: Cardboard Looms


Card Board Looms by Lili Pintea Reed

While I think eventually every weaver wants to have a nice many many harness floor loom, people with a blossoming interest in weaving can dive in and get started right now -- cheap. And they can make nice useful items for themselves and their family. Here are few suggestions on ways to get moving when you've been bitten by the "weaving bug" while you save for that big floor loom of your dreams. It will also teach you techniques to use when making a sample of a project before you take the time to dress a big loom. A good practice to develop.

One of the first ways to get started is to use part of a cardboard cereal box. Cut one side off of a large size box. This will make a nice placemat size piece. Measure in two inches and mark off regular intervals on the *long sides* of the box. Now make quarter inch slits into the cardboard on the marks. Do the same on the short sides. How close these are depends on your yarn thickness, but for commercial worsted weight I'd suggest six to the inch.

Then wrap your yarn around the cardboard putting it in the grooves as you wrap around and around. You now have the warp (up and down threads) to make two place mats, one on each side. To fill in your weft (the sideways yarn) thread a long piece of yarn on a tapestry needle. Hook it securely in the top groove of the unwrapped side and start threading the needle over one thread and under another. Keep doing this over one thread, under another thread pulling your yarn along. This is called a balanced or tabby weave. When you get to the end of the row. Reverse and on the next row go *under* then over. As the yarn runs out re-thread your needle and start the new piece overlapping the last several inches. Keep on in this way until the cardboard is covered.

Voila!! A placemat... Do the same on the other side. Voila a matched set... Cut the threads and either bind the edges or tie them off in fringe.

Enjoy your place mats!

(this article originally appeared under my pen name Annie Mode in FIber NEWS JULY 1997.)

The copyright of the article WEAVING: Cardboard Looms in Fiber Arts is owned by Lili Pintea-Reed. Permission to republish WEAVING: Cardboard Looms in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

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