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Adventures of the Loom and Soul

For me, weaving is always an adventure, sometimes because I head off into uncharted territory and sometimes because I end up in unintended places. But some weaves are adventures in themselves.

Anita Osterhaug Jan 5, 2016 - 2 min read

Adventures of the Loom and Soul Primary Image

Jennifer Moore

"Every production of an artist should be the expression of an adventure of his soul.” –William Somerset Maugham

Bolivian doubleweave band

Modern doubleweave band from Bolivia  

For me, weaving is always an adventure, sometimes because I head off into uncharted territory and sometimes because I end up in unintended places. But some weaves are adventures in themselves. Doubleweave pickup, for example, is often associated with Scandinavia, but it made its own way across Asia long before the Vikings brought it home from their adventures.

In Asia, doublewoven silk was considered so precious that it was given to secure political and military alliances. In South America, adventurers in ancient Peru carried the technique from the coast to the high Andes where it is enjoying a rebirth today.

Modern-day doubleweavers are also an artistic, adventurous lot, creating anew with every pick and throw. When you consider the infinite combinations that can be made by varying layers, colors, structures, and threads, they live in a world of virtually infinite possibilities. 

Jennifer Moore

 

Jennifer Moore's "Journey from Abydos," inspired by a long-ago trip to Egypt.

Jennifer Moore is just the kind of adventurous soul one might expect to find doing doubleweave. She's travelled around the world (although not to Antarctica, "yet"), she's been stranded with a broken-down microbus in the Australian Outback ("It was a lot like Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, but without the clothes and makeup."), and marooned while working on a fishing boat in the South Pacific.

  • Anita

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