I love to be around people who have forgotten more than I will ever know. No matter how much I learn there is always someone who can teach me more, and that is a great gift. To build weaving skills, I practice and read and take classes when I can. But there’s no replacing the “Aha!” moments to be gained by watching someone who has woven so long that weaving knowledge has sunk into in every synapse, bone, and sinew.
Madelyn and director Garrett Evans setting
up another tip-filled video segment.
Madelyn shows us that there's no
mystery to weaving well.
Camerawoman Carolyn Getches reminds us
how important it is to watch!
I thought of that “Aha!” moment often as we filmed Weaving Well. Madelyn often says that all weavers stand on the shoulders of giants, weavers past and present who’ve built our store of knowledge. She says she’s made every possible weaving mistake, and she has certainly answered a breathtaking number of questions over more than twenty-five years running The Weavers' School. Madelyn’s new video is full of techniques, tips, and tricks for successful weaving, gained from those years of weaving, studying, observing, and teaching. She shows how to size up a yarn, plan a project, and weave happily from start to finish. She explains the connections that are often left unsaid, because for expert weavers, they go without saying: that how you wind a bobbin can determine the quality of your selvedges, that you can hemstitch as you weave the header of your piece, when to unweave and when to just cut out wefts to correct a pattern error.
Madelyn also says that she tries to demonstrate things as awkwardly as possible, so that students don’t feel bad about awkward moments. I am reassured by those occasional awkward moments, but I’m even more reassured by watching Madelyn weave, serenely and in tune with shuttle, loom, and threads. I’m reassured because I see that there is no magic to weaving well, that a serene and successful weaving experience is also within my reach, given practice, time, and the will to look over the shoulders of giants and learn.