If you have ever demonstrated weaving in public or sold scarves at a craft show, you probably recognize the title of this post. I believe it is because of the linear nature of weaving that people often ask how long it takes to weave something. I can’t imagine that they ask the same of a painter or a woodworker. How long did it take you to paint that picture? How many hours did it take to make that chair? Those would be odd questions, wouldn’t they? In 20 plus years of weaving, I still don’t have a good answer, and that’s because I’m not sure what to include. For instance, do I include:
- Design time?
- Hours on the Internet searching for the right yarns?
- Sampling?
- Time spent winding skeins into balls?
- Time spent unweaving and reweaving, or unsleying and resleying, when I found errors?
- Hours in front of the TV
- The 20-plus years I spent getting to this place in my weaving career?
Actually, I believe that the person asking the question really just wants to know how long it took me to thread the loom and weave the scarf. None of the above really concerns them. Therein lies the problem.
I once answered the question of how long it took me to weave this scarf without including all of the above bulleted points. The customer looked at the price tag and remarked that I was doing pretty well. I was, to say the least, astounded, partially because the cost of the yarn wasn’t even in the equation, but mostly because quick math showed I was charging less than minimum wage would require. Ever since then, I give a more detailed answer and never answer with a simple number of hours spent weaving. As a weaver, I feel one of my jobs is to educate the public, and downplaying the time it takes to weave a scarf isn’t part of that job. Now my answer usually begins with, “It depends . . .”
Weave well, Susan