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Wikipedia

Loom

A loom is a device used to weave cloth and tapestry. The basic purpose of any loom is to hold the warp threads under tension to facilitate the interweaving of the weft threads. The precise shape of the loom and its mechanics may vary, but the basic function is the same.

A treadle-driven Hattersley & Sons Domestic Loom, built under licence in 1893, in Keighley, Yorkshire. This loom has a flying shuttle and automatically rolls up the woven cloth; it is not just controlled but powered by the pedals.
A woman in Konya, Turkey, works at a vertical loom
A simple handheld frame loom

Etymology and usage edit

The word "loom" derives from the Old English geloma, formed from ge- (perfective prefix) and loma, a root of unknown origin; the whole word geloma meant a utensil, tool, or machine of any kind. In 1404 "lome" was used to mean a machine to enable weaving thread into cloth.[1][2][failed verification] By 1838 "loom" had gained the additional meaning of a machine for interlacing thread.[citation needed]

Components and actions edit

Basic structure edit

Weaving is done on two sets of threads or yarns, which cross one another. The warp threads are the ones stretched on the loom (from the Proto-Indo-European *werp, "to bend"[3]). Each thread of the weft (i.e. "that which is woven") is inserted so that it passes over and under the warp threads.

The ends of the warp threads are usually fastened to beams. One end is fastened to one beam, the other end to a second beam, so that the warp threads all lie parallel and are all the same length. The beams are held apart to keep the warp threads taut.

The textile is woven starting at one end of the warp threads, and progressing towards the other end. The beam on the finished-fabric end is called the cloth beam. The other beam is called the warp beam.

Beams may be used as rollers to allow the weaver to weave a piece of cloth longer than the loom. As the cloth is woven, the warp threads are gradually unrolled from the warp beam, and the woven portion of the cloth is rolled up onto the cloth beam (which is also called the takeup roll). The portion of the fabric that has already been formed but not yet rolled up on the takeup roll is called the fell.

Not all looms have two beams. For instance, warp-weighted looms have only one beam; the warp yarns hang from this beam. The bottom ends of the warp yarns are tied to dangling loom weights.

 Lease rodsHeddles and heddle frames or harnessBatten bar or beater barReedShuttleTreadleBreast beamWarp beam
A simple treadle floor loom. Mouse over components for pop-up links. The warp runs horizontally. On the left the warp beam, held from turning by with a weighted trough to keep the warp taut; on the right, the cloth beam (also called a breast beam on this type of loom), with a pawl and ratchet to allow the weaver to roll up the fell. In the center, devices for performing the motions of weaving.

Motions edit

 
Passing the shuttle through the shed

A loom has to perform three principal motions: shedding, picking, and battening.

  • Shedding. Shedding is pulling part of the warp threads aside to form a shed (the space between the raised and unraised warp yarns). The shed is the space through which the filling yarn, carried by the shuttle, can be inserted, forming the weft.
    • Sheds may be simple: for instance, lifting all the odd threads and all the even threads alternately produces a tabby weave (the two sheds are called the shed and countershed). More intricate shedding sequences can produce more complex weaves, such as twill.
  • Picking. A single crossing of the weft thread from one side of the loom to the other, through the shed, is known as a pick. Picking is passing the weft through the shed. A new shed is then formed before a new pick is inserted.
    • Conventional shuttle looms can operate at speeds of about 150 to 160 picks per minute.[4]
  • Battening. After the pick, the new pass of weft thread has to be tamped up against the fell, to avoid making a fabric with large, irregular gaps between the weft threads. This compression of the weft threads is called battening.

There are also usually two secondary motions, because the newly constructed fabric must be wound onto cloth beam. This process is called taking up. At the same time, the warp yarns must be let off or released from the warp beam, unwinding from it. To become fully automatic, a loom needs a tertiary motion, the filling stop motion. This will brake the loom if the weft thread breaks.[4] An automatic loom requires 0.125 hp to 0.5 hp to operate.

Components edit

A loom, then, usually needs two beams, and some way to hold them apart. It generally has additional components to make shedding, picking, and battening faster and easier. There are also often components to help take up the fell.

The nature of the loom frame and the shedding, picking, and battening devices vary. Looms come in a wide variety of types, many of them specialized for specific types of weaving. They are also specialized for the lifestyle of the weaver. For instance, nomadic weavers tend to use lighter, more portable looms, while weavers living in cramped city dwellings are more likely to use a tall upright loom, or a loom that folds into a narrow space when not in use.

Frames edit

Loom frames can be roughly divided, by the orientation of the warp threads, into horizontal looms and vertical looms. There are many finer divisions. Most handlooom frame designs can be constructed fairly simply.[5]

Backstrap loom edit

The back-strap loom (also known as belt loom)[6] is a simple loom with ancient roots, still used in many cultures around the world (such as Andean textiles). It consists of two sticks or bars between which the warps are stretched. One bar is attached to a fixed object and the other to the weaver, usually by means of a strap around the weaver's back. The weaver leans back and uses their body weight to tension the loom.

Both simple and complex textiles can be woven on backstrap looms. They produce narrowcloth: width is limited to the weaver's armspan. They can readily produce warp-faced textiles, often decorated with intricate pick-up patterns woven in complementary and supplementary warp techniques, and brocading. Balanced weaves are also possible on the backstrap loom.

Warp-weighted loom edit

 
Warp-weighted loom with three heddle-rods for weaving twill

The warp-weighted loom is a vertical loom that may have originated in the Neolithic period. Its defining characteristic is hanging weights (loom weights) which keep bundles of the warp threads taut. Frequently, extra warp thread is wound around the weights. When a weaver has woven far enough down, the completed section (fell) can be rolled around the top beam, and additional lengths of warp threads can be unwound from the weights to continue. This frees the weaver from vertical size constraint. Horizontally, breadth is limited by armspan; making broadwoven cloth requires two weavers, standing side by side at the loom.

Simple weaves, and complex weaves that need more than two different sheds, can both be woven on a warp-weighted loom. They can also be used to produce tapestries.

Pegged or floor loom edit

 

 
Qashqai nomad sisters, weaving a carpet on a floor loom. Near Firuzabad, Iran

In pegged looms, the beams can be simply held apart by hooking them behind pegs driven into the ground, with wedges or lashings used to adjust the tension. Pegged looms may, however, also have horizontal sidepieces holding the beams apart.

Such looms are easy to set up and dismantle, and are easy to transport, so they are popular with nomadic weavers. They are generally only used for comparatively small woven articles.[9] Urbanites are unlikely to use horizontal floor looms as they take up a lot of floor space, and full-time professional weavers are unlikely to use them as they are unergonomic. Their cheapness and portability is less valuable to urban professional weavers.[10]

Treadle loom edit

Elements of a treadle loom
 
  1. Wood frame
  2. Seat for weaver
  3. Warp beam- let off
  4. Warp threads
  5. Back beam or platen
  6. Rods – used to make a shed
  7. Heddle frame - heald frame - harness
  8. Heddle- heald - the eye
  9. Shuttle with weft yarn
  10. Shed
  11. Completed fabric
  12. Breast beam
  13. Batten with reed comb
  14. Batten adjustment
  15. Lathe
  16. Treadles
  17. Cloth roll- takeup

In a treadle loom, the shedding is controlled by the feet, which tread on the treadles.

The earliest evidence of a horizontal loom is found on a pottery dish in ancient Egypt, dated to 4400 BC. It was a frame loom, equipped with treadles to lift the warp threads, leaving the weaver's hands free to pass and beat the weft thread.[11]

A pit loom has a pit for the treadles, reducing the stress transmitted through the much shorter frame.[12]

In a wooden vertical-shaft loom, the heddles are fixed in place in the shaft. The warp threads pass alternately through a heddle, and through a space between the heddles (the shed), so that raising the shaft raises half the threads (those passing through the heddles), and lowering the shaft lowers the same threads — the threads passing through the spaces between the heddles remain in place.

A treadle loom for figured weaving may have a large number of harnesses or a control head. It can, for instance, have a Jacquard machine attached to it[13] (see Loom#Shedding methods).

Tapestry looms edit

Tapestry can have extremely complex wefts, as different strands of wefts of different colours are used to form the pattern. Speed is lower, and shedding and picking devices may be simpler. Looms used for weaving traditional tapestry are called not as "vertical-warp" and "horizontal-warp", but as "high-warp" or "low-warp" (the French terms haute-lisse and basse-lisse are also used in English).[14]

Ribbon, Band, and Inkle weaving edit

Inkle looms are narrow looms used for narrow work. They are used to make narrow warp-faced strips such as ribbons, bands, or tape. They are often quite small; some are used on a tabletop. others are backstraps looms with a rigid heddle, and very portable.

Darning looms edit

There exist very small hand-held looms known as darning looms. They are made to fit under the fabric being mended, and are often held in place by an elastic band on one side of the cloth and a groove around the loom's darning-egg portion on the other. They may have heddles made of flip-flopping rotating hooks (see Loom#Rotating-hook heddles).[15] Other devices sold as darning looms are just a darning egg and a separate comb-like piece with teeth to hook the warp over; these are used for repairing knitted garments and are like a linear knitting spool.[16] Darning looms were sold during World War Two clothing rationing in the United Kingdom[17] and Canada,[18] and some are homemade.[19][20]

Circular handlooms edit

Circular looms are used to create seamless tubes of fabric for products such as hosiery, sacks, clothing, fabric hoses (such as fire hoses) and the like. Tablet weaving can be used to knit tubes, including tubes that split and join.

Small jigs also used for circular knitting are also sometimes called circular looms,[21] but they are used for knitting, not weaving.

Shedding methods edit

 
Pin weaving, not using any shedding devices. Note hair comb, presumably used to beat the warp against the fell.

It is possible to weave by manually threading the weft over and under the warp threads, but this is slow. Some tapestry techniques use manual shedding. Pin looms and peg looms also generally have no shedding devices. Pile carpets generally do not use shedding for the pile, because each pile thread is individually knotted onto the warps, but there may be shedding for the weft holding the carpet together.

Usually weaving uses shedding devices. These devices pull some of the warp threads to each side, so that a shed is formed between them, and the weft is passed through the shed. There are a variety of methods for forming the shed. At least two sheds must be formed, the shed and the countershed. Two sheds is enough for tabby weave; more complex weaves, such as twill weaves, satin weaves, diaper weaves, and figured (picture-forming) weaves, require more sheds.

Shed-rod edit

 
Loom with a shed bar and without a string heddle, neolithic reconstruction in the Piatra Neamț Museum

A shed-rod (shedding stick, shed roll) is simply a stick woven through the warp threads. When pulled perpendicular to the threads (or rotated to stand on edge, for wide, flat shedding rods), it creates a shed. To create the counter-shed, a heddle-bar is usually used.

Heddle-bar edit

Elements of a warp-weighted loom
 
See body text for labels.
 
Heddle-rod on a tapestry frame, France, 2018

A heddle-bar is simply a stick placed across the warp and tied to individual warp threads. When it is lifted, it pulls the warp threads it is tied to out of position, creating a shed.

A warp-weighted loom (see diagram) typically uses a heddle-bar. It has two upright posts (C); they support a horizontal beam (D), which is cylindrical so that the finished cloth can be rolled around it, allowing the loom to be used to weave a piece of cloth taller than the loom, and preserving an ergonomic working height. The warp threads (F, and A and B) hang from the beam and rest against the shed rod (E). The heddle-bar (G) is tied to some of the warp threads (A, but not B), using loops of string called leashes (H). So when the heddle rod is pulled out and placed in the forked sticks protruding from the posts (not lettered, no technical term given in citation), the shed (1) is replaced by the counter-shed (2). By passing the weft through the shed and the counter-shed, alternately, cloth is woven.[22]

Heddle-rods are used on modern tapestry looms.

Tablet weaving edit

 
Simple one-tablet weaving

Tablet weaving uses cards punched with holes. The warp threads pass through the holes, and the cards are twisted and shifted to created varied sheds. This shedding technique is used for narrow work. It is also used to finish edges, weaving decorative selvage bands instead of hemming.

Rotating-hook heddles edit

 
Darning loom with hook heddle

There are heddles made of flip-flopping rotating hooks, which raise and lower the warp, creating sheds. The hooks, when vertical, have the weft threads looped around them horizontally. If the hooks are flopped over on side or another, the loop of weft twists, raising one or the other side of the loop, which creates the shed and countershed.[23]

Rigid heddles edit

 
A rigid heddle on a backstrap inkle loom, unspanned.

Rigid heddles are generally used on single-shaft looms. Odd warp threads go through the slots, and even ones through the circular holes, or vice-versa. The shed is formed by lifting the heddle, and the countershed by depressing it. The warp threads in the slots stay where they are, and the ones in the circular holes are pulled back and forth. A single rigid heddle can hold all the warp threads, though sometimes multiple rigid heddles are used.

Treadles may be used to drive the rigid heddle up and down.

Multiple heddles edit

 
This loom has two string heddles, connected via a pulley overhead so that they rise and fall alternately. They are operated by treadles. Each treadle is a toggle on a string, held in the weaver's toes. He is making a simple tabby-weave cloth, bogolan.

Rigid heddles (above) are called "rigid" to distinguish them from string and metal heddles, where each warp thread has its own heddle, which has an eye at each end and one in the middle for the warp thread. The eyes in the ends are fastened to a shaft, all in a row. This requires multiple shafts; it cannot be done on a single-shaft loom. The different shafts (also called harnesses) must be controlled by some mechanism.

While non-rigid heddles generally mean that two shafts are needed even for a plain tabby weave, twill weaves require three or more (depending on the type of twill), and more complex figured weaves require still more harnesses.

Treadle-controlled looms edit

Treadle looms can control multiple harnessess with multiple treadles. The weaver selects which harnesses are engaged with their feet. One treadle may be connected to more than one harness, and any number of treadles can be engaged at once, meaning that the number of different sheds that can be selected is two to the power of the number of treadles. Eight is a large but reasonable number of treadles, giving a maximum of 28=256 sheds (some of which will not have enough threads on one side to be useful). The weaver must remember the sequence of treadling needed to produce the pattern.

Figure harness and the drawloom edit

 
Drawloom, with drawboy above to control the harnesses, woven as a repeating pattern in an early-18-hundreds piece of Japanese figured silk.

A drawloom is for weaving figured cloth. In a drawloom, a "figure harness" is used to control each warp thread separately,[24] allowing very complex patterns. A drawloom requires two operators, the weaver, and an assistant called a "drawboy" to manage the figure harness.

The earliest confirmed drawloom fabrics come from the State of Chu and date c. 400 BC.[25] Some scholars speculate an independent invention in ancient Syria, since drawloom fabrics found in Dura-Europas are thought to date before 256 AD.[25][26] The draw loom was invented in China during the Han dynasty (State of Liu?);[contradictory][27] foot-powered multi-harness looms and jacquard looms were used for silk weaving and embroidery, both of which were cottage industries with imperial workshops.[28] The drawloom enhanced and sped up the production of silk and played a significant role in Chinese silk weaving. The loom was introduced to Persia, India, and Europe.[27]

Dobby head edit

 
Dobby-loom control mechanism. The pegs driven into the bars (hung in a loop on the left) each lift one "treadle" in a pre-determined pattern, like lifting the teeth of a music box. Hooghly District, West Bengal, 2019

A dobby head is a device that replaces the drawboy, the weaver's helper who used to control the warp threads by pulling on draw threads. "Dobby" is a corruption of "draw boy". Mechanical dobbies pull on the draw threads using pegs in bars to lift a set of levers. The placement of the pegs determines which levers are lifted. The sequence of bars (they are strung together) effectively remembers the sequence for the weaver. Computer-controlled dobbies use solenoids instead of pegs.

Jacquard head edit

The Jacquard loom is a mechanical loom, invented by Joseph Marie Jacquard in 1801, which simplifies the process of manufacturing figured textiles with complex patterns such as brocade, damask and matelasse.[29][30] The loom is controlled by punched cards with punched holes, each row of which corresponds to one row of the design. Multiple rows of holes are punched on each card and the many cards that compose the design of the textile are strung together in order. It is based on earlier inventions by the Frenchmen Basile Bouchon (1725), Jean Baptiste Falcon (1728) and Jacques Vaucanson (1740).[31] To call it a loom is a misnomer, a Jacquard head could be attached to a power loom or a handloom, the head controlling which warp thread was raised during shedding. Multiple shuttles could be used to control the colour of the weft during picking. The Jacquard loom is the predecessor to the computer punched card readers of the 19th and 20th centuries.[32]

Picking (weft insertion) edit

 
Shuttleless tablet weaving, Finland (image of finished band).

The weft may be passed across the shed as a ball of yarn, but usually this is too bulky and unergonomic. Shuttles are designed to be slim, so they pass through the shed; to carry a lot of yarn, so the weaver does not need to refill them too often; and to be an ergonomic size and shape for the particular weaver, loom, and yarn. They may also be designed for low friction.

Stick shuttles edit

Unnotched stick shuttles edit

At their simplest, these are just sticks wrapped with yarn. They may be specially shaped, as with the bobbins and bones used in tapestry-making (bobbins are used on vertical warps, and bones on horizontal ones).[33][34]

Notched stick shuttles, rag shuttles, and ski shuttles edit

Boat shuttles edit

Boat shuttles may be closed (central hollow with a solid bottom) or open (central hole goes right through). The yarn may be side-feed or end-feed.[38][39] They are commonly made for 10-cm (4-inch) and 15-cm (6-inch) bobbin lengths.[40]

Flying shuttle edit

Hand weavers who threw a shuttle could only weave a cloth as wide as their armspan. If cloth needed to be wider, two people would do the task (often this would be an adult with a child). John Kay (1704–1779) patented the flying shuttle in 1733. The weaver held a picking stick that was attached by cords to a device at both ends of the shed. With a flick of the wrist, one cord was pulled and the shuttle was propelled through the shed to the other end with considerable force, speed and efficiency. A flick in the opposite direction and the shuttle was propelled back. A single weaver had control of this motion but the flying shuttle could weave much wider fabric than an arm's length at much greater speeds than had been achieved with the hand thrown shuttle.

The flying shuttle was one of the key developments in weaving that helped fuel the Industrial Revolution. The whole picking motion no longer relied on manual skill and it was just a matter of time before it could be powered by something other than a human.

Jacquard ribbon loom, showing distinctive sliding ribbon shuttles.

Weft insertion in power looms edit

 
A Picanol rapier loom
Weft insertion at 15 seconds
 
1906 Toyoda circular weaving loom

Different types of power looms are most often defined by the way that the weft, or pick, is inserted into the warp. Many advances in weft insertion have been made in order to make manufactured cloth more cost effective. Weft insertion rate is a limiting factor in production speed. As of 2010, industrial looms can weave at 2,000 weft insertions per minute.[41]

There are five main types of weft insertion and they are as follows:

  • Shuttle: The first-ever powered looms were shuttle-type looms. Spools of weft are unravelled as the shuttle travels across the shed. This is very similar to projectile methods of weaving, except that the weft spool is stored on the shuttle. These looms are considered obsolete in modern industrial fabric manufacturing because they can only reach a maximum of 300 picks per minute.
  • Air jet: An air-jet loom uses short quick bursts of compressed air to propel the weft through the shed in order to complete the weave. Air jets are the fastest traditional method of weaving in modern manufacturing and they are able to achieve up to 1,500 picks per minute. However, the amounts of compressed air required to run these looms, as well as the complexity in the way the air jets are positioned, make them more costly than other looms.
  • Water jet: Water-jet looms use the same principle as air-jet looms, but they take advantage of pressurized water to propel the weft. The advantage of this type of weaving is that water power is cheaper where water is directly available on site. Picks per minute can reach as high as 1,000.
  • Rapier loom: This type of weaving is very versatile, in that rapier looms can weave using a large variety of threads. There are several types of rapiers, but they all use a hook system attached to a rod or metal band to pass the pick across the shed. These machines regularly reach 700 picks per minute in normal production.
  • Projectile: Projectile looms utilize an object that is propelled across the shed, usually by spring power, and is guided across the width of the cloth by a series of reeds. The projectile is then removed from the weft fibre and it is returned to the opposite side of the machine so it can be reused. Multiple projectiles are in use in order to increase the pick speed. Maximum speeds on these machines can be as high as 1,050 ppm.
  • Circular: Modern circular looms use up to ten shuttles, driven in a circular motion from below by electromagnets, for the weft yarns, and cams to control the warp threads. The warps rise and fall with each shuttle passage, unlike the common practice of lifting all of them at once. Circular looms are used to create seamless tubes of fabric for products such as hosiery, sacks, clothing, fabric hoses (such as fire hoses) and the like.[42]

Battening edit

The newest weft thread must be beaten against the fell. Battening can be done with a long stick placed in the shed parallel to the weft (a sword batten), a shorter stick threaded between the warp threads perpendicular to warp and weft (a pin batten), a comb, or a reed (a comb with both ends closed, so that it has to be sleyed, that is have the warp threads threaded through it, when the loom is warped). For rigid-heddle looms, the heddle may be used as a reed.

Secondary motions edit

Dandy mechanism edit

Patented in 1802, dandy looms automatically rolled up the finished cloth, keeping the fell always the same length. They significantly speeded up hand weaving (still a major part of the textile industry in the 1800s). Similar mechanisms were used in power looms.

Temples edit

 
A temple on a loom

The temples act to keep the cloth from shrinking sideways as it is woven. Some warp-weighted looms had temples made of loom weights, suspended by strings so that they pulled the cloth breadthwise.[22] Other looms may have temples tied to the frame, or temples that are hooks with an adjustable shaft between them. Power looms may use temple cylinders. Pins can leave a series of holes in the selvages (these may be from stenter pins used in post-processing).

Handlooms to power looms edit

Two Lancashire looms in the Queen Street Mill weaving shed, Burnley
A 1939 loom working at the Mueller Cloth Mill museum in Euskirchen, Germany.

A power loom is a loom powered by a source of energy other than the weaver's muscles. When power looms were developed, other looms came to be referred to as handlooms. Most cloth is now woven on power looms, but some is still woven on handlooms.[12]

The development of power looms was gradual. The capabilities of power looms gradually expanded, but handlooms remained the most cost-effective way to make some types of textiles for most of the 1800s. Many improvements in loom mechanisms were first applied to hand looms (like the dandy loom), and only later integrated into power looms.

Edmund Cartwright built and patented a power loom in 1785, and it was this that was adopted by the nascent cotton industry in England. The silk loom made by Jacques Vaucanson in 1745 operated on the same principles but was not developed further. The invention of the flying shuttle by John Kay allow a hand weaver to weave broadwoven cloth without an assistant, and was also critical to the development of a commercially successful power loom.[43] Cartwright's loom was impractical but the ideas behind it were developed by numerous inventors in the Manchester area of England where, by 1818, there were 32 factories containing 5,732 looms.[44]

The Horrocks loom was viable, but it was the Roberts Loom in 1830 that marked the turning point.[45][clarification needed] Incremental changes to the three motions continued to be made. The problems of sizing, stop-motions, consistent take-up, and a temple to maintain the width remained. In 1841, Kenworthy and Bullough produced the Lancashire Loom[46] which was self-acting or semi-automatic. This enables a youngster to run six looms at the same time. Thus, for simple calicos, the power loom became more economical to run than the handloom – with complex patterning that used a dobby or Jacquard head, jobs were still put out to handloom weavers until the 1870s. Incremental changes were made such as the Dickinson Loom, culminating in the Keighley-born inventor Northrop, who was working for the Draper Corporation in Hopedale producing the fully automatic Northrop Loom. This loom recharged the shuttle when the pirn was empty. The Draper E and X models became the leading products from 1909. They were challenged by synthetic fibres such as rayon.[47]

By 1942, faster, more efficient, and shuttleless Sulzer and rapier looms had been introduced.[48]

Symbolism and cultural significance edit

The loom is a symbol of cosmic creation and the structure upon which individual destiny is woven. This symbolism is encapsulated in the classical myth of Arachne who was changed into a spider by the goddess Athena, who was jealous of her skill at the godlike craft of weaving.[49] In Maya civilization the goddess Ixchel taught the first woman how to weave at the beginning of time.[50]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "loom". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ "loom - Origin and meaning of loom by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  3. ^ "warp - Search Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  4. ^ a b Collier 1970, p. 104.
  5. ^ Koster, Joan (1978). . Volunteers in Technical Assistance, Inc. Archived from the original on 2 March 2014.
  6. ^ Kent, Kate P. (1957). "The Cultivation and Weaving of Cotton in the Prehistoric Southwestern United States". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 47 (3): 485. doi:10.2307/1005732. hdl:2027/mdp.39015017458095. JSTOR 1005732.
  7. ^ Lush, Emily (9 December 2017). "Making of: T'nalak Weaving, Philippines". The Textile Atlas. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  8. ^ "Abaca". White Champa. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  9. ^ Edwards, A. Cecil (1975). The Persian carpet : a survey of the carpet-weaving industry of Persia (Reprinted 1952 ed.). London: Duckworth. ISBN 978-0715602560.
  10. ^ "Types of carpets loom and knowledge of its components". Farahan Carpet. 18 April 2021.
  11. ^ Bruno, Leonard C.; Olendorf, Donna (1997). Science and technology firsts. Gale Research. p. 2. ISBN 9780787602567. 4400 B.C. Earliest evidence of the use of a horizontal loom is its depiction on a pottery dish found in Egypt and dated to this time. These first true frame looms are equipped with foot pedals to lift the warp threads, leaving the weaver's hands free to pass and beat the weft thread.
  12. ^ a b "Know Your Handlooms". DAMA Handloom Store. 2020-10-18. Retrieved 2022-03-24.
  13. ^ . 19 March 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-12-01.
  14. ^ https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bas-lisse and the other 3 entries
  15. ^ On darning loom function:
    • "Darning Mini Wooden Loom Machine". Miupie. (commercial site, but with animation showing how it works)
    • Morley, Jasmin (8 September 2022). "Darning Loom Instructions". Purl and Friends. Retrieved 7 January 2023., [not given], Allison (27 December 2021). "Darning loom". On the Needles. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
    • "How To Use A 1940s "Speed weve" Darner [repost of original 1940s instruction manual]". Rag & Magpie. 16 April 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  16. ^ "Katrinkles Darning Loom". Around the Table Yarns. (darning loom without heddles, just a comb, for knits).
  17. ^ Boyne, Jo (3 October 2021). "How To Use A Speedweve Loom To Mend Clothes ⋆ A Rose Tinted World". A Rose Tinted World. Retrieved 9 December 2022. (not an independent source)
  18. ^ "the Swift Darning Loom from Worth Mending". Worth Mending.
  19. ^ "Make Your Own Darning Looms". Instructables.
  20. ^ "Speedweve Style Darning Loom | Glowforge". glowforge.com.
  21. ^ Jocelyn C. (22 December 2008). How to: Cast on/Knit using a Circular Loom. Archived from the original on 2021-11-14. Retrieved 27 June 2016 – via YouTube.
  22. ^ a b c Article describing the experimental reconstruction of the 6th-7th century Anglo-Saxon warp-weighted loom from Pakenham, Suffolk
  23. ^ "Darning Mini Wooden Loom Machine". Miupie. (commercial site, but with animation showing how it works), Morley, Jasmin (8 September 2022). "Darning Loom Instructions". Purl and Friends. Retrieved 7 January 2023., [not given], Allison (27 December 2021). "Darning loom". On the Needles. Retrieved 7 January 2023., "How To Use A 1940s "Speed weve" Darner [repost of original 1940s instruction manual]". Rag & Magpie. 16 April 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  24. ^ Burnham 1980, p. 48.
  25. ^ a b Broudy 1979, p. 124.
  26. ^ Forbes 1987, pp. 218, 220.
  27. ^ a b Ceccarelli, Marco; López-Cajún, Carlos (2012). Explorations in the History of Machines and Mechanisms: Proceedings of HMM2012 (History of Mechanism and Machine Science). Springer. pp. 219–220. ISBN 978-9400799448.
  28. ^ Usher, Abbott Payson (2011). A History of Mechanical Inventions. Dover Publications. p. 54. ISBN 978-0486255934.
  29. ^ Hobsbawm, Eric (2008) [1962]. The Age of Revolution. London. p. 45.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  30. ^ . Christina Lynn. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  31. ^ Razy 1913, p. 120.
  32. ^ Geselowitz, Michael N. (18 July 2016). . The Institute: The IEEE news source. IEEE. Archived from the original on 1 April 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  33. ^ "Tapestry Weaving with Soumak". Between and Etc.
  34. ^ Churchill Candee, Helen (1912). The Tapestry Book (The Project Gutenberg eBook [EBook #26151] ed.). Fredrick A. Stokes.
  35. ^ "Choosing the Right Shuttle for the Job". Schacht Spindle Company. 20 December 2021.
  36. ^ a b Moncreif, Liz. "Choosing and Using Shuttles: Stick Shuttles, Flat Shuttles, and Rag Shuttles". Handwoven Magazine. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  37. ^ Moncreif, Liz. "Choosing and Using Shuttles: Rug and Ski". Handwoven Magazine. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  38. ^ Moncreif, Liz. "Choosing and Using Shuttles—Boat Shuttles, Bobbins, and Quills". Handwoven Magazine. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  39. ^ Moncreif, Liz. "Choosing and Using Shuttles: Double-Bobbin Boat Shuttles and End-Feed Shuttles". Handwoven Magazine. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  40. ^ "Weaving Shuttles". Bluster Bay Woodworks.
  41. ^ Rajagopalan, S. . S.S.M. College of Engineering, Komarapalayam. Archived from the original on 29 November 2010 – via Pdexcil.org.
  42. ^ "Circular Looms". Starlinger. Retrieved 27 June 2016.
  43. ^ Marsden 1895, p. 57.
  44. ^ Guest 1823, p. 46.
  45. ^ Marsden 1895, p. 76.
  46. ^ Marsden 1895, p. 94.
  47. ^ Mass 1990.
  48. ^ Collier 1970, p. 111.
  49. ^ Tresidder, Jack (1997). The Hutchinson Dictionary of Symbols. London: Helicon Publishers. p. 127. ISBN 1-85986-059-1.
  50. ^ Rosenbaum, Brenda P. (1990). "Mayan Women, Weaving and Ethnic Identity: a Historical Essay". Guatemala: Museo Ixchel del Traje Indigena: 157–169.

Bibliography edit

  • Barber, E. J. W. (1991). Prehistoric Textiles. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00224-X.
  • Broudy, Eric (1979). The Book of Looms: A History of the Handloom from Ancient Times to the Present. Hanover and London: University Press of New England. ISBN 9780874516494.
  • Burnham, Dorothy K. (1980). Warp and Weft: A Textile Terminology. Royal Ontario Museum. ISBN 0-88854-256-9.
  • Collier, Ann M. (1970). A Handbook of Textiles. Pergamon Press. ISBN 0-08-018057-4.
  • Crowfoot, Grace (November 1937). "Of the Warp-Weighted Loom". The Annual of the British School at Athens. 37: 36–47. doi:10.1017/s0068245400017950. S2CID 193172489.
  • Forbes, R. J. (1987). Studies in Ancient Technology, Volume 4. Leiden / New York: E. J. Brill. ISBN 9004083073.
  • Guest, Richard (1823). The Compendious History of Cotton-Manufacture. Retrieved 15 February 2009.
  • Marsden, Richard (1895). . George Bell & Sons. Archived from the original on 2018-06-29. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
  • Mass, William (1990). "The Decline of a Technology Leader:Capability, strategy and shuttleless Weaving" (PDF). Business and Economic History. ISSN 0894-6825. (PDF) from the original on 2005-04-29.
  • Razy, C. (1913). Étude analytique des petits modèles de métiers exposés au musée des tissus (in French). Lyon, France: Musée historique des tissus.
  • Ventura, Carol (2003). Maya Hair Sashes Backstrap Woven in Jacaltenango, Guatemala, Cintas Mayas tejidas con el telar de cintura en Jacaltenango, Guatemala. Carol Ventura. ISBN 0-9721253-1-0.

External links edit

  • Loom demonstration video
  • "Caring for your loom" article
  • "The Art and History of Weaving"
  • The Medieval Technology Pages:

loom, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, knitting, machine, loom, device, used, weave, cloth, tapestry, basic, purpose, loom, hold, warp, threads, under, tension, facilitate, interweaving, weft, threads, precise, shape, loom, mechanics, vary, basic, . For other uses see Loom disambiguation Not to be confused with Knitting machine A loom is a device used to weave cloth and tapestry The basic purpose of any loom is to hold the warp threads under tension to facilitate the interweaving of the weft threads The precise shape of the loom and its mechanics may vary but the basic function is the same A treadle driven Hattersley amp Sons Domestic Loom built under licence in 1893 in Keighley Yorkshire This loom has a flying shuttle and automatically rolls up the woven cloth it is not just controlled but powered by the pedals A woman in Konya Turkey works at a vertical loom A simple handheld frame loom Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 Components and actions 2 1 Basic structure 2 2 Motions 2 3 Components 3 Frames 3 1 Backstrap loom 3 2 Warp weighted loom 3 3 Pegged or floor loom 3 4 Treadle loom 3 5 Tapestry looms 3 6 Ribbon Band and Inkle weaving 3 7 Darning looms 3 8 Circular handlooms 4 Shedding methods 4 1 Shed rod 4 2 Heddle bar 4 3 Tablet weaving 4 4 Rotating hook heddles 4 5 Rigid heddles 4 6 Multiple heddles 4 6 1 Treadle controlled looms 4 6 2 Figure harness and the drawloom 4 6 3 Dobby head 4 6 4 Jacquard head 5 Picking weft insertion 5 1 Stick shuttles 5 1 1 Unnotched stick shuttles 5 2 Notched stick shuttles rag shuttles and ski shuttles 5 3 Boat shuttles 5 4 Flying shuttle 5 5 Weft insertion in power looms 6 Battening 7 Secondary motions 7 1 Dandy mechanism 7 2 Temples 8 Handlooms to power looms 9 Symbolism and cultural significance 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEtymology and usage editThe word loom derives from the Old English geloma formed from ge perfective prefix and loma a root of unknown origin the whole word geloma meant a utensil tool or machine of any kind In 1404 lome was used to mean a machine to enable weaving thread into cloth 1 2 failed verification By 1838 loom had gained the additional meaning of a machine for interlacing thread citation needed Components and actions editSee also Weaving and Textile manufacturing terminology Basic structure edit Weaving is done on two sets of threads or yarns which cross one another The warp threads are the ones stretched on the loom from the Proto Indo European werp to bend 3 Each thread of the weft i e that which is woven is inserted so that it passes over and under the warp threads The ends of the warp threads are usually fastened to beams One end is fastened to one beam the other end to a second beam so that the warp threads all lie parallel and are all the same length The beams are held apart to keep the warp threads taut The textile is woven starting at one end of the warp threads and progressing towards the other end The beam on the finished fabric end is called the cloth beam The other beam is called the warp beam Beams may be used as rollers to allow the weaver to weave a piece of cloth longer than the loom As the cloth is woven the warp threads are gradually unrolled from the warp beam and the woven portion of the cloth is rolled up onto the cloth beam which is also called the takeup roll The portion of the fabric that has already been formed but not yet rolled up on the takeup roll is called the fell Not all looms have two beams For instance warp weighted looms have only one beam the warp yarns hang from this beam The bottom ends of the warp yarns are tied to dangling loom weights nbsp A simple treadle floor loom Mouse over components for pop up links The warp runs horizontally On the left the warp beam held from turning by with a weighted trough to keep the warp taut on the right the cloth beam also called a breast beam on this type of loom with a pawl and ratchet to allow the weaver to roll up the fell In the center devices for performing the motions of weaving source source source source source source source source Weaving demonstration on an 1830 handloom in the weaving museum in Leiden nbsp A Turkish carpet loom showing warp threads wrapped around the warp beam above and the fell being wrapped onto the cloth beam below Motions edit nbsp Passing the shuttle through the shed A loom has to perform three principal motions shedding picking and battening Shedding Shedding is pulling part of the warp threads aside to form a shed the space between the raised and unraised warp yarns The shed is the space through which the filling yarn carried by the shuttle can be inserted forming the weft Sheds may be simple for instance lifting all the odd threads and all the even threads alternately produces a tabby weave the two sheds are called the shed and countershed More intricate shedding sequences can produce more complex weaves such as twill Picking A single crossing of the weft thread from one side of the loom to the other through the shed is known as a pick Picking is passing the weft through the shed A new shed is then formed before a new pick is inserted Conventional shuttle looms can operate at speeds of about 150 to 160 picks per minute 4 Battening After the pick the new pass of weft thread has to be tamped up against the fell to avoid making a fabric with large irregular gaps between the weft threads This compression of the weft threads is called battening There are also usually two secondary motions because the newly constructed fabric must be wound onto cloth beam This process is called taking up At the same time the warp yarns must be let off or released from the warp beam unwinding from it To become fully automatic a loom needs a tertiary motion the filling stop motion This will brake the loom if the weft thread breaks 4 An automatic loom requires 0 125 hp to 0 5 hp to operate Components edit A loom then usually needs two beams and some way to hold them apart It generally has additional components to make shedding picking and battening faster and easier There are also often components to help take up the fell The nature of the loom frame and the shedding picking and battening devices vary Looms come in a wide variety of types many of them specialized for specific types of weaving They are also specialized for the lifestyle of the weaver For instance nomadic weavers tend to use lighter more portable looms while weavers living in cramped city dwellings are more likely to use a tall upright loom or a loom that folds into a narrow space when not in use Frames editLoom frames can be roughly divided by the orientation of the warp threads into horizontal looms and vertical looms There are many finer divisions Most handlooom frame designs can be constructed fairly simply 5 Backstrap loom edit The back strap loom also known as belt loom 6 is a simple loom with ancient roots still used in many cultures around the world such as Andean textiles It consists of two sticks or bars between which the warps are stretched One bar is attached to a fixed object and the other to the weaver usually by means of a strap around the weaver s back The weaver leans back and uses their body weight to tension the loom Both simple and complex textiles can be woven on backstrap looms They produce narrowcloth width is limited to the weaver s armspan They can readily produce warp faced textiles often decorated with intricate pick up patterns woven in complementary and supplementary warp techniques and brocading Balanced weaves are also possible on the backstrap loom source source source source source source source source Weaving a silk rebozo on a backstrap loom at the Taller Escuela de Reboceria in Santa Maria del Rio San Luis Potosi Mexico nbsp T boli dream weavers using two bar bamboo backstrap looms legogong to weave t nalak cloth from abaca fiber One bar is attached to the ceiling of the traditional T boli longhouse while the other is attached to the lower back Philippines 7 8 nbsp This Hlai weaver tensions her traditional backstrap loom with her feet Hainan Island Southern People s Republic of China nbsp An Icelandic backstrap loom 1903 The inkle workpiece is so narrow that no beams are needed the warp ends are simply tied as one Tablets are used for the shedding nbsp A Sami weaver doing inkle weaving on a backstrap loom with a rigid heddle Norway 1956 Warp weighted loom edit nbsp Warp weighted loom with three heddle rods for weaving twill Main article Warp weighted loom The warp weighted loom is a vertical loom that may have originated in the Neolithic period Its defining characteristic is hanging weights loom weights which keep bundles of the warp threads taut Frequently extra warp thread is wound around the weights When a weaver has woven far enough down the completed section fell can be rolled around the top beam and additional lengths of warp threads can be unwound from the weights to continue This frees the weaver from vertical size constraint Horizontally breadth is limited by armspan making broadwoven cloth requires two weavers standing side by side at the loom Simple weaves and complex weaves that need more than two different sheds can both be woven on a warp weighted loom They can also be used to produce tapestries Pegged or floor loom edit nbsp nbsp Qashqai nomad sisters weaving a carpet on a floor loom Near Firuzabad Iran In pegged looms the beams can be simply held apart by hooking them behind pegs driven into the ground with wedges or lashings used to adjust the tension Pegged looms may however also have horizontal sidepieces holding the beams apart Such looms are easy to set up and dismantle and are easy to transport so they are popular with nomadic weavers They are generally only used for comparatively small woven articles 9 Urbanites are unlikely to use horizontal floor looms as they take up a lot of floor space and full time professional weavers are unlikely to use them as they are unergonomic Their cheapness and portability is less valuable to urban professional weavers 10 Treadle loom edit Elements of a treadle loom nbsp Wood frame Seat for weaver Warp beam let off Warp threads Back beam or platen Rods used to make a shed Heddle frame heald frame harness Heddle heald the eye Shuttle with weft yarn Shed Completed fabric Breast beam Batten with reed comb Batten adjustment Lathe Treadles Cloth roll takeup In a treadle loom the shedding is controlled by the feet which tread on the treadles The earliest evidence of a horizontal loom is found on a pottery dish in ancient Egypt dated to 4400 BC It was a frame loom equipped with treadles to lift the warp threads leaving the weaver s hands free to pass and beat the weft thread 11 A pit loom has a pit for the treadles reducing the stress transmitted through the much shorter frame 12 In a wooden vertical shaft loom the heddles are fixed in place in the shaft The warp threads pass alternately through a heddle and through a space between the heddles the shed so that raising the shaft raises half the threads those passing through the heddles and lowering the shaft lowers the same threads the threads passing through the spaces between the heddles remain in place A treadle loom for figured weaving may have a large number of harnesses or a control head It can for instance have a Jacquard machine attached to it 13 see Loom Shedding methods nbsp Traditional treadle loom at Ranipauwa Muktinath Nepal another image nbsp Japanese treadle loom late 1820s early 1830s nbsp Weaving at a pit loom the frame is built shorter but set over a pit so that the treadles are below ground level Herat Afghanistan nbsp A simple tripod frame supports the heddle pulley which seems to be more of a teeter totter of this West African loom from each heddle frame hangs a treadle trod alternately to form shed and countershed Tapestry looms edit Main article tapestry Tapestry can have extremely complex wefts as different strands of wefts of different colours are used to form the pattern Speed is lower and shedding and picking devices may be simpler Looms used for weaving traditional tapestry are called not as vertical warp and horizontal warp but as high warp or low warp the French terms haute lisse and basse lisse are also used in English 14 nbsp Medieval European haute lisse tapestry loom Oddly while many dangling bobbins are shown the different colours are not nbsp Haut lisse tapestry loom 2022 New Zealand nbsp Commercial haut lisse tapestry loom 2004 nbsp A commercial basse lisse tapestry loom in the same factory 2004 nbsp Tapestry tools on the loom Bobbins scrapper with short teeth comb double ended and awl tip hidden source source source source source source A power loom in the TextielMuseum Tilburg weaving a tapestry for the Niewe Kerk Middelburg note that the threads do not vary in colour along their length Ribbon Band and Inkle weaving edit Main article Inkle weaving Inkle looms are narrow looms used for narrow work They are used to make narrow warp faced strips such as ribbons bands or tape They are often quite small some are used on a tabletop others are backstraps looms with a rigid heddle and very portable Darning looms edit Main article Darning loom There exist very small hand held looms known as darning looms They are made to fit under the fabric being mended and are often held in place by an elastic band on one side of the cloth and a groove around the loom s darning egg portion on the other They may have heddles made of flip flopping rotating hooks see Loom Rotating hook heddles 15 Other devices sold as darning looms are just a darning egg and a separate comb like piece with teeth to hook the warp over these are used for repairing knitted garments and are like a linear knitting spool 16 Darning looms were sold during World War Two clothing rationing in the United Kingdom 17 and Canada 18 and some are homemade 19 20 Circular handlooms edit Not to be confused with circular knitting Circular looms are used to create seamless tubes of fabric for products such as hosiery sacks clothing fabric hoses such as fire hoses and the like Tablet weaving can be used to knit tubes including tubes that split and join Small jigs also used for circular knitting are also sometimes called circular looms 21 but they are used for knitting not weaving Shedding methods edit nbsp Pin weaving not using any shedding devices Note hair comb presumably used to beat the warp against the fell Main article Shed weaving It is possible to weave by manually threading the weft over and under the warp threads but this is slow Some tapestry techniques use manual shedding Pin looms and peg looms also generally have no shedding devices Pile carpets generally do not use shedding for the pile because each pile thread is individually knotted onto the warps but there may be shedding for the weft holding the carpet together Usually weaving uses shedding devices These devices pull some of the warp threads to each side so that a shed is formed between them and the weft is passed through the shed There are a variety of methods for forming the shed At least two sheds must be formed the shed and the countershed Two sheds is enough for tabby weave more complex weaves such as twill weaves satin weaves diaper weaves and figured picture forming weaves require more sheds Shed rod edit nbsp Loom with a shed bar and without a string heddle neolithic reconstruction in the Piatra Neamț Museum A shed rod shedding stick shed roll is simply a stick woven through the warp threads When pulled perpendicular to the threads or rotated to stand on edge for wide flat shedding rods it creates a shed To create the counter shed a heddle bar is usually used Heddle bar edit Elements of a warp weighted loom nbsp See body text for labels nbsp Heddle rod on a tapestry frame France 2018 A heddle bar is simply a stick placed across the warp and tied to individual warp threads When it is lifted it pulls the warp threads it is tied to out of position creating a shed A warp weighted loom see diagram typically uses a heddle bar It has two upright posts C they support a horizontal beam D which is cylindrical so that the finished cloth can be rolled around it allowing the loom to be used to weave a piece of cloth taller than the loom and preserving an ergonomic working height The warp threads F and A and B hang from the beam and rest against the shed rod E The heddle bar G is tied to some of the warp threads A but not B using loops of string called leashes H So when the heddle rod is pulled out and placed in the forked sticks protruding from the posts not lettered no technical term given in citation the shed 1 is replaced by the counter shed 2 By passing the weft through the shed and the counter shed alternately cloth is woven 22 Heddle rods are used on modern tapestry looms Tablet weaving edit Main article tablet weaving nbsp Simple one tablet weaving Tablet weaving uses cards punched with holes The warp threads pass through the holes and the cards are twisted and shifted to created varied sheds This shedding technique is used for narrow work It is also used to finish edges weaving decorative selvage bands instead of hemming Rotating hook heddles edit Main article Darning loom nbsp Darning loom with hook heddle There are heddles made of flip flopping rotating hooks which raise and lower the warp creating sheds The hooks when vertical have the weft threads looped around them horizontally If the hooks are flopped over on side or another the loop of weft twists raising one or the other side of the loop which creates the shed and countershed 23 Rigid heddles edit nbsp A rigid heddle on a backstrap inkle loom unspanned Rigid heddles are generally used on single shaft looms Odd warp threads go through the slots and even ones through the circular holes or vice versa The shed is formed by lifting the heddle and the countershed by depressing it The warp threads in the slots stay where they are and the ones in the circular holes are pulled back and forth A single rigid heddle can hold all the warp threads though sometimes multiple rigid heddles are used Treadles may be used to drive the rigid heddle up and down Multiple heddles edit nbsp This loom has two string heddles connected via a pulley overhead so that they rise and fall alternately They are operated by treadles Each treadle is a toggle on a string held in the weaver s toes He is making a simple tabby weave cloth bogolan Rigid heddles above are called rigid to distinguish them from string and metal heddles where each warp thread has its own heddle which has an eye at each end and one in the middle for the warp thread The eyes in the ends are fastened to a shaft all in a row This requires multiple shafts it cannot be done on a single shaft loom The different shafts also called harnesses must be controlled by some mechanism While non rigid heddles generally mean that two shafts are needed even for a plain tabby weave twill weaves require three or more depending on the type of twill and more complex figured weaves require still more harnesses Treadle controlled looms edit Treadle looms can control multiple harnessess with multiple treadles The weaver selects which harnesses are engaged with their feet One treadle may be connected to more than one harness and any number of treadles can be engaged at once meaning that the number of different sheds that can be selected is two to the power of the number of treadles Eight is a large but reasonable number of treadles giving a maximum of 28 256 sheds some of which will not have enough threads on one side to be useful The weaver must remember the sequence of treadling needed to produce the pattern Figure harness and the drawloom edit nbsp Drawloom with drawboy above to control the harnesses woven as a repeating pattern in an early 18 hundreds piece of Japanese figured silk A drawloom is for weaving figured cloth In a drawloom a figure harness is used to control each warp thread separately 24 allowing very complex patterns A drawloom requires two operators the weaver and an assistant called a drawboy to manage the figure harness The earliest confirmed drawloom fabrics come from the State of Chu and date c 400 BC 25 Some scholars speculate an independent invention in ancient Syria since drawloom fabrics found in Dura Europas are thought to date before 256 AD 25 26 The draw loom was invented in China during the Han dynasty State of Liu contradictory 27 foot powered multi harness looms and jacquard looms were used for silk weaving and embroidery both of which were cottage industries with imperial workshops 28 The drawloom enhanced and sped up the production of silk and played a significant role in Chinese silk weaving The loom was introduced to Persia India and Europe 27 Dobby head edit nbsp Dobby loom control mechanism The pegs driven into the bars hung in a loop on the left each lift one treadle in a pre determined pattern like lifting the teeth of a music box Hooghly District West Bengal 2019 Main article dobby loom A dobby head is a device that replaces the drawboy the weaver s helper who used to control the warp threads by pulling on draw threads Dobby is a corruption of draw boy Mechanical dobbies pull on the draw threads using pegs in bars to lift a set of levers The placement of the pegs determines which levers are lifted The sequence of bars they are strung together effectively remembers the sequence for the weaver Computer controlled dobbies use solenoids instead of pegs Jacquard head edit Main article Jacquard loom The Jacquard loom is a mechanical loom invented by Joseph Marie Jacquard in 1801 which simplifies the process of manufacturing figured textiles with complex patterns such as brocade damask and matelasse 29 30 The loom is controlled by punched cards with punched holes each row of which corresponds to one row of the design Multiple rows of holes are punched on each card and the many cards that compose the design of the textile are strung together in order It is based on earlier inventions by the Frenchmen Basile Bouchon 1725 Jean Baptiste Falcon 1728 and Jacques Vaucanson 1740 31 To call it a loom is a misnomer a Jacquard head could be attached to a power loom or a handloom the head controlling which warp thread was raised during shedding Multiple shuttles could be used to control the colour of the weft during picking The Jacquard loom is the predecessor to the computer punched card readers of the 19th and 20th centuries 32 nbsp The punched card control mechanism of a Jacquard loom in use in 2009 Varanasi Uttar Pradesh India nbsp Hand operated Jacquard looms in the Textile Department of the Strzeminski Academy of Fine Arts in Lodz Poland nbsp Battening on a jacquard loom in Lodz nbsp A female worker changing jacquard cards in a lace machine in a Nottingham factory 1918 First World War nbsp Boy next to two weaving looms with the weaving pattern on reams of paper India nbsp Following the pattern holes are punched in the appropriate places on a jacquard card nbsp Manual loom with double width and jacquard loom Colegio del Arte Mayor de la Seda of Valencia nbsp The Jacquard cards control the healds on a loom Picking weft insertion edit nbsp Shuttleless tablet weaving Finland image of finished band The weft may be passed across the shed as a ball of yarn but usually this is too bulky and unergonomic Shuttles are designed to be slim so they pass through the shed to carry a lot of yarn so the weaver does not need to refill them too often and to be an ergonomic size and shape for the particular weaver loom and yarn They may also be designed for low friction Stick shuttles edit Unnotched stick shuttles edit At their simplest these are just sticks wrapped with yarn They may be specially shaped as with the bobbins and bones used in tapestry making bobbins are used on vertical warps and bones on horizontal ones 33 34 nbsp Shuttles are passed not thrown through warp weighted looms These Ancient Greek weavers have a yarn wrapped stick 22 nbsp Tapestry bobbins are used on vertical warp looms nbsp Tapestry bobbins empty and full nbsp Tapestry bones are used on horizontal warp looms nbsp Tapestry bones actually made from cannonbones those in the last image are wooden nbsp Paper quills paper bobbins used as tapestry bones in Dhaka Bangladesh Notched stick shuttles rag shuttles and ski shuttles edit nbsp Stick shuttles wound in a figure of eight nbsp nbsp Stick shuttles must be passed not thrown which is inconvenient for wide warps nbsp Belt or band shuttle a short shuttle used for inkle weaving This extra sturdy shuttle is also used at a batten to beat the newly woven weft against the previously woven fell 35 nbsp Netting shuttle 36 Also used for netting nbsp Ski shuttle 37 nbsp A rag shuttle has two skis it is used for weaving strips of rag into carpets whence the name 36 Boat shuttles edit Boat shuttles may be closed central hollow with a solid bottom or open central hole goes right through The yarn may be side feed or end feed 38 39 They are commonly made for 10 cm 4 inch and 15 cm 6 inch bobbin lengths 40 nbsp Top an open boat shuttle the other two are closed Bottom a Swedish style asymmetrical shuttle with a paper quill All are side feed the topmost one runs on rollers nbsp Boat shuttle inside the shed It floats on the lower warp threads This only works on horizontal looms Rhode Island USA nbsp Boats with square ended recesses are intended for bobbins with end flanges Other shuttles have round cornered recesses They are often intended for use with paper quills tubes of rolled paper nbsp Macedonian open shuttles with paper quills nbsp A collection of open and closed shuttles in Ukraine some clearly handmade nbsp This Transyvanian shuttle was a Valentine s Day gift nbsp These Assamese shuttles presumably for very fine silk are slender and do not hold much volume nbsp Asymmetric open boat shuttle Khotan nbsp Two end feed pirns and a side feed bobbin bottom nbsp Simple closed side feed boat shuttle with a paper bobbin Mexico nbsp How the conical pirn loads on an end feed shuttle nbsp Using two shuttles for weft stripes Estonia nbsp Weaving with three shuttles Flying shuttle edit Main articles Flying shuttle and Narrow cloth source source source source source Handloom with a flying shuttle The shuttle runs in a shuttle race attached to the front of the beater bar source source source source source An early fully automated loom The arms at the sides can be seen swinging to bash the flying shuttle back and forth source source source source source source source source The automated shuttle moves almost too fast to see nbsp Manufacture of a boxwood flying shuttle nbsp In the shuttle race nbsp Narrow tanmono loom with a shuttle race Late 18 hundreds Japan Hand weavers who threw a shuttle could only weave a cloth as wide as their armspan If cloth needed to be wider two people would do the task often this would be an adult with a child John Kay 1704 1779 patented the flying shuttle in 1733 The weaver held a picking stick that was attached by cords to a device at both ends of the shed With a flick of the wrist one cord was pulled and the shuttle was propelled through the shed to the other end with considerable force speed and efficiency A flick in the opposite direction and the shuttle was propelled back A single weaver had control of this motion but the flying shuttle could weave much wider fabric than an arm s length at much greater speeds than had been achieved with the hand thrown shuttle The flying shuttle was one of the key developments in weaving that helped fuel the Industrial Revolution The whole picking motion no longer relied on manual skill and it was just a matter of time before it could be powered by something other than a human source source source source source source source source Jacquard ribbon loom showing distinctive sliding ribbon shuttles Weft insertion in power looms edit nbsp A Picanol rapier loom source source source source Weft insertion at 15 seconds nbsp 1906 Toyoda circular weaving loom Different types of power looms are most often defined by the way that the weft or pick is inserted into the warp Many advances in weft insertion have been made in order to make manufactured cloth more cost effective Weft insertion rate is a limiting factor in production speed As of 2010 update industrial looms can weave at 2 000 weft insertions per minute 41 There are five main types of weft insertion and they are as follows Shuttle The first ever powered looms were shuttle type looms Spools of weft are unravelled as the shuttle travels across the shed This is very similar to projectile methods of weaving except that the weft spool is stored on the shuttle These looms are considered obsolete in modern industrial fabric manufacturing because they can only reach a maximum of 300 picks per minute Air jet An air jet loom uses short quick bursts of compressed air to propel the weft through the shed in order to complete the weave Air jets are the fastest traditional method of weaving in modern manufacturing and they are able to achieve up to 1 500 picks per minute However the amounts of compressed air required to run these looms as well as the complexity in the way the air jets are positioned make them more costly than other looms Water jet Water jet looms use the same principle as air jet looms but they take advantage of pressurized water to propel the weft The advantage of this type of weaving is that water power is cheaper where water is directly available on site Picks per minute can reach as high as 1 000 Rapier loom This type of weaving is very versatile in that rapier looms can weave using a large variety of threads There are several types of rapiers but they all use a hook system attached to a rod or metal band to pass the pick across the shed These machines regularly reach 700 picks per minute in normal production Projectile Projectile looms utilize an object that is propelled across the shed usually by spring power and is guided across the width of the cloth by a series of reeds The projectile is then removed from the weft fibre and it is returned to the opposite side of the machine so it can be reused Multiple projectiles are in use in order to increase the pick speed Maximum speeds on these machines can be as high as 1 050 ppm Circular Modern circular looms use up to ten shuttles driven in a circular motion from below by electromagnets for the weft yarns and cams to control the warp threads The warps rise and fall with each shuttle passage unlike the common practice of lifting all of them at once Circular looms are used to create seamless tubes of fabric for products such as hosiery sacks clothing fabric hoses such as fire hoses and the like 42 Battening editMain article Beater weaving nbsp Coast Salish sword beater North American west coast nbsp Sword beaters or battens on upright looms are indeed swung like a sword nbsp Sword beater on an Ancient Egyptian horizontal ground pegged loom being held by two people nbsp Bone sword beater 2 and adjacent bone pin beater 3 Iron Age Middle East nbsp Weaving comb used for battening Braga Portugal nbsp Reed beater mounted in a beater bar nbsp Rigid heddles are a shedding device that can also act as a reed The newest weft thread must be beaten against the fell Battening can be done with a long stick placed in the shed parallel to the weft a sword batten a shorter stick threaded between the warp threads perpendicular to warp and weft a pin batten a comb or a reed a comb with both ends closed so that it has to be sleyed that is have the warp threads threaded through it when the loom is warped For rigid heddle looms the heddle may be used as a reed Secondary motions editDandy mechanism edit Main article dandy loom Patented in 1802 dandy looms automatically rolled up the finished cloth keeping the fell always the same length They significantly speeded up hand weaving still a major part of the textile industry in the 1800s Similar mechanisms were used in power looms Temples edit nbsp A temple on a loom Main article temple weaving The temples act to keep the cloth from shrinking sideways as it is woven Some warp weighted looms had temples made of loom weights suspended by strings so that they pulled the cloth breadthwise 22 Other looms may have temples tied to the frame or temples that are hooks with an adjustable shaft between them Power looms may use temple cylinders Pins can leave a series of holes in the selvages these may be from stenter pins used in post processing Handlooms to power looms editMain article Power loom source source source source Two Lancashire looms in the Queen Street Mill weaving shed Burnley source source source source source source A 1939 loom working at the Mueller Cloth Mill museum in Euskirchen Germany A power loom is a loom powered by a source of energy other than the weaver s muscles When power looms were developed other looms came to be referred to as handlooms Most cloth is now woven on power looms but some is still woven on handlooms 12 The development of power looms was gradual The capabilities of power looms gradually expanded but handlooms remained the most cost effective way to make some types of textiles for most of the 1800s Many improvements in loom mechanisms were first applied to hand looms like the dandy loom and only later integrated into power looms Edmund Cartwright built and patented a power loom in 1785 and it was this that was adopted by the nascent cotton industry in England The silk loom made by Jacques Vaucanson in 1745 operated on the same principles but was not developed further The invention of the flying shuttle by John Kay allow a hand weaver to weave broadwoven cloth without an assistant and was also critical to the development of a commercially successful power loom 43 Cartwright s loom was impractical but the ideas behind it were developed by numerous inventors in the Manchester area of England where by 1818 there were 32 factories containing 5 732 looms 44 The Horrocks loom was viable but it was the Roberts Loom in 1830 that marked the turning point 45 clarification needed Incremental changes to the three motions continued to be made The problems of sizing stop motions consistent take up and a temple to maintain the width remained In 1841 Kenworthy and Bullough produced the Lancashire Loom 46 which was self acting or semi automatic This enables a youngster to run six looms at the same time Thus for simple calicos the power loom became more economical to run than the handloom with complex patterning that used a dobby or Jacquard head jobs were still put out to handloom weavers until the 1870s Incremental changes were made such as the Dickinson Loom culminating in the Keighley born inventor Northrop who was working for the Draper Corporation in Hopedale producing the fully automatic Northrop Loom This loom recharged the shuttle when the pirn was empty The Draper E and X models became the leading products from 1909 They were challenged by synthetic fibres such as rayon 47 By 1942 faster more efficient and shuttleless Sulzer and rapier looms had been introduced 48 Symbolism and cultural significance editThe loom is a symbol of cosmic creation and the structure upon which individual destiny is woven This symbolism is encapsulated in the classical myth of Arachne who was changed into a spider by the goddess Athena who was jealous of her skill at the godlike craft of weaving 49 In Maya civilization the goddess Ixchel taught the first woman how to weave at the beginning of time 50 Gallery edit nbsp Model of Navajo Loom late 19th century Brooklyn Museum jpg nbsp An early nineteenth century Japanese loom with several heddles which the weaver controls with her foot nbsp A Jakaltek Maya brocades a hair sash on a back strap loom nbsp Handloom at Hjerl Hede Denmark showing grayish warp threads back and cloth woven with red filling yarn front nbsp Oaxacan artisan Alberto Sanchez Martinez at loom nbsp Handloom at the Korkosz Croft in Czarna Gora Poland 19th century nbsp A loom in an Old Believer homestead in Slutiski Latvia nbsp Handloom from India nbsp Weaver from India showing handloom during an exhibition nbsp A Grecian urn showing a warp weighted loomSee also editBunkar The Last of the Varanasi Weavers documentary film Fashion and Textile Museum Textile manufacturing Timeline of clothing and textiles technology Weaving mythology References edit loom Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required loom Origin and meaning of loom by Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com warp Search Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com a b Collier 1970 p 104 Koster Joan 1978 Handloom Construction A Practical Guide for the Non Expert Volunteers in Technical Assistance Inc Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Kent Kate P 1957 The Cultivation and Weaving of Cotton in the Prehistoric Southwestern United States Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 47 3 485 doi 10 2307 1005732 hdl 2027 mdp 39015017458095 JSTOR 1005732 Lush Emily 9 December 2017 Making of T nalak Weaving Philippines The Textile Atlas Retrieved 3 April 2019 Abaca White Champa Retrieved 3 April 2019 Edwards A Cecil 1975 The Persian carpet a survey of the carpet weaving industry of Persia Reprinted 1952 ed London Duckworth ISBN 978 0715602560 Types of carpets loom and knowledge of its components Farahan Carpet 18 April 2021 Bruno Leonard C Olendorf Donna 1997 Science and technology firsts Gale Research p 2 ISBN 9780787602567 4400 B C Earliest evidence of the use of a horizontal loom is its depiction on a pottery dish found in Egypt and dated to this time These first true frame looms are equipped with foot pedals to lift the warp threads leaving the weaver s hands free to pass and beat the weft thread a b Know Your Handlooms DAMA Handloom Store 2020 10 18 Retrieved 2022 03 24 Handloom VS Powerloom 19 March 2020 Archived from the original on 2020 12 01 https www merriam webster com dictionary bas lisse and the other 3 entries On darning loom function Darning Mini Wooden Loom Machine Miupie commercial site but with animation showing how it works Morley Jasmin 8 September 2022 Darning Loom Instructions Purl and Friends Retrieved 7 January 2023 not given Allison 27 December 2021 Darning loom On the Needles Retrieved 7 January 2023 How To Use A 1940s Speed weve Darner repost of original 1940s instruction manual Rag amp Magpie 16 April 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2022 Katrinkles Darning Loom Around the Table Yarns darning loom without heddles just a comb for knits Boyne Jo 3 October 2021 How To Use A Speedweve Loom To Mend Clothes A Rose Tinted World A Rose Tinted World Retrieved 9 December 2022 not an independent source the Swift Darning Loom from Worth Mending Worth Mending Make Your Own Darning Looms Instructables Speedweve Style Darning Loom Glowforge glowforge com Jocelyn C 22 December 2008 How to Cast on Knit using a Circular Loom Archived from the original on 2021 11 14 Retrieved 27 June 2016 via YouTube a b c Article describing the experimental reconstruction of the 6th 7th century Anglo Saxon warp weighted loom from Pakenham Suffolk Darning Mini Wooden Loom Machine Miupie commercial site but with animation showing how it works Morley Jasmin 8 September 2022 Darning Loom Instructions Purl and Friends Retrieved 7 January 2023 not given Allison 27 December 2021 Darning loom On the Needles Retrieved 7 January 2023 How To Use A 1940s Speed weve Darner repost of original 1940s instruction manual Rag amp Magpie 16 April 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2022 Burnham 1980 p 48 a b Broudy 1979 p 124 Forbes 1987 pp 218 220 a b Ceccarelli Marco Lopez Cajun Carlos 2012 Explorations in the History of Machines and Mechanisms Proceedings of HMM2012 History of Mechanism and Machine Science Springer pp 219 220 ISBN 978 9400799448 Usher Abbott Payson 2011 A History of Mechanical Inventions Dover Publications p 54 ISBN 978 0486255934 Hobsbawm Eric 2008 1962 The Age of Revolution London p 45 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fabric Glossary Christina Lynn Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 21 November 2008 Razy 1913 p 120 Geselowitz Michael N 18 July 2016 The Jacquard Loom A Driver of the Industrial Revolution The Institute The IEEE news source IEEE Archived from the original on 1 April 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2018 Tapestry Weaving with Soumak Between and Etc Churchill Candee Helen 1912 The Tapestry Book The Project Gutenberg eBook EBook 26151 ed Fredrick A Stokes Choosing the Right Shuttle for the Job Schacht Spindle Company 20 December 2021 a b Moncreif Liz Choosing and Using Shuttles Stick Shuttles Flat Shuttles and Rag Shuttles Handwoven Magazine Retrieved 12 January 2023 Moncreif Liz Choosing and Using Shuttles Rug and Ski Handwoven Magazine Retrieved 12 January 2023 Moncreif Liz Choosing and Using Shuttles Boat Shuttles Bobbins and Quills Handwoven Magazine Retrieved 12 January 2023 Moncreif Liz Choosing and Using Shuttles Double Bobbin Boat Shuttles and End Feed Shuttles Handwoven Magazine Retrieved 12 January 2023 Weaving Shuttles Bluster Bay Woodworks Rajagopalan S Advances in Weaving Technology and Looms S S M College of Engineering Komarapalayam Archived from the original on 29 November 2010 via Pdexcil org Circular Looms Starlinger Retrieved 27 June 2016 Marsden 1895 p 57 Guest 1823 p 46 Marsden 1895 p 76 Marsden 1895 p 94 Mass 1990 Collier 1970 p 111 Tresidder Jack 1997 The Hutchinson Dictionary of Symbols London Helicon Publishers p 127 ISBN 1 85986 059 1 Rosenbaum Brenda P 1990 Mayan Women Weaving and Ethnic Identity a Historical Essay Guatemala Museo Ixchel del Traje Indigena 157 169 Bibliography editBarber E J W 1991 Prehistoric Textiles Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00224 X Broudy Eric 1979 The Book of Looms A History of the Handloom from Ancient Times to the Present Hanover and London University Press of New England ISBN 9780874516494 Burnham Dorothy K 1980 Warp and Weft A Textile Terminology Royal Ontario Museum ISBN 0 88854 256 9 Collier Ann M 1970 A Handbook of Textiles Pergamon Press ISBN 0 08 018057 4 Crowfoot Grace November 1937 Of the Warp Weighted Loom The Annual of the British School at Athens 37 36 47 doi 10 1017 s0068245400017950 S2CID 193172489 Forbes R J 1987 Studies in Ancient Technology Volume 4 Leiden New York E J Brill ISBN 9004083073 Guest Richard 1823 The Compendious History of Cotton Manufacture Retrieved 15 February 2009 Marsden Richard 1895 Cotton Weaving Its Development Principles and Practice George Bell amp Sons Archived from the original on 2018 06 29 Retrieved 2009 04 19 Mass William 1990 The Decline of a Technology Leader Capability strategy and shuttleless Weaving PDF Business and Economic History ISSN 0894 6825 Archived PDF from the original on 2005 04 29 Razy C 1913 Etude analytique des petits modeles de metiers exposes au musee des tissus in French Lyon France Musee historique des tissus Ventura Carol 2003 Maya Hair Sashes Backstrap Woven in Jacaltenango Guatemala Cintas Mayas tejidas con el telar de cintura en Jacaltenango Guatemala Carol Ventura ISBN 0 9721253 1 0 External links edit nbsp Look up loom in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Looms Loom demonstration video Caring for your loom article The Art and History of Weaving The Medieval Technology Pages The Horizontal Loom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Loom amp oldid 1221703255 Drawloom, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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