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14 Mile Farm

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Cowls : tangible warmth and tangible love

September 1, 2016 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Handwoven cowl in jewel tones | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

I mainly weave baby wraps, and I love the merging of engineering (weight bearing needs, wrapping quality preferences) and artistic expression that baby wraps as a product line requires of me.  However, we all know that eventually babes become children and our wearing days wind down to a close.  When that inevitably happens, I'd be sad to entirely lose the textile-based connections and friendships I'm forming with my customers.  Additionally, there are many people in my life outside of babywearing who have asked how they can get a piece of what I make.  

And so, I have been experimenting with scarf designs.  This cowl/hood is a full wrap width deep and nearly a meter in circumference.  I love the generous way it drapes around neck, covering the heart or warming tense shoulders depending on how it is placed.  

I think I'll add this to the smaller (more affordable) tube cowls that I have been offering as a regular product line here at 14 Mile.  As makers must, I'm already thinking ahead to the holiday season: is this something you'd be interested in gifting to someone special this year?  Keep an eye out here and on the 14 Mile Farm Facebook page for listings! 

P.S. I'm excessively smitten with the way that my new hair matches the tones that I dyed into Unconditional.  

Handwoven cowl in jewel tones | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
In Weaving, Studio Tags handwoven cowl, cowl, scarf, handwoven scarf, holiday gift
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Unconditional : Great Competition of Weavers IBC Atlanta

August 12, 2016 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.

Unconditional is woven as a networked twill on a parallel threading.  This means that two colors, here a wine red and a variegated greens and blues, alternate (abababab) across the entirety of the warp.  The wine red symbolizes a mother’s love: its constancy through the changes which life brings, its unconditional nature.  It is hand dyed in tones of the same color, bringing in a monochrome element to the design and speaking to the way that a mother’s love is enacted differently for an infant, a toddler, a child, a teen, an adult as her child grows and yet the essence of it remains the same. The variegated warp contains four shades of blue and four shades of green.  It moves in an ombre from mostly blues on one selvedge to mostly greens on the other selvedge.  This symbolizes the way that our children change and grow, perhaps multiplying in number, while rooted in the constancy of a mother’s love.  The draft itself resembles leaves, evoking the tree in the competition image itself a symbol of Mother Earth and the essence of abundant fertility that mothers embody.  

Great Competition of Weavers Babywearing Edition : Wear Together Grow Together at IBC Atlanta

This year, for the first time ever, Loom to Wrap  hosted the Great Competition of Weavers live in person at IBC Atlanta.  There were three components to the judging: online voting, in-person voting, and live judging!  The panel of three judges was comprised of a well-respected baby wrap weaver, a long time experienced babywearer and handwovens enthusiast, and a Master weaver from the Atlanta guild.  They judged the pieces based on an impartial rubric.  

The above image was the official inspiration image for the competition.  I drew thematic inspiration from the sweet line drawing and pulled a few colors from the logo image.  Additionally, we had to include either a monochromatic and/or an ombre element in the design.

It was amazing - and slightly nerve wracking - to have my work seen and touched (and wrapped with!) by so many people!  And so cool to see the diversity and craftsmanship of handwovens having a moment in the spotlight at IBC!  The feedback overall from the guild's Master weaver was that she was really impressed with the artistry and craftsmanship that our little corner of the world has to offer.  

Handpainted warp for a baby wrap | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Handdyed yarn for a handpainted baby wrap | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

Two pieces, one of which went to the competition and one which I am keeping were woven in a black lyocell weft with the full leaves pattern.  The black weft really brings out the jewel tones I was going for with the dye job. The treadling sequence was a 204 repeat, which means that my feet made 204 different steps before the pattern of leaves repeated itself.  

On one piece there are four visible disruptions in the pattern, left unmended in honor of the way that moments of great happiness or great tragedy, whether personal or national or global, leave an indelible mark in our lives yet do not change our lives’ dynamics of growth and love.

Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones.

One sister piece was woven with a smoke grey mulberry silk weft that made for one of the most luxurious feeling piece of fabric I think I've ever touched.  I love the way the light grey makes it appear almost pastel, yet still vibrant, from a distance.

Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones with a silver silk weft muting them to a vivid pastel.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones with a silver silk weft muting them to a vivid pastel.
Unconditional was 14 Mile Farm's entry into the Great Competition of Weavers at IBC Atlanta.  A handwoven baby wrap in handpainted jewel tones with a silver silk weft muting them to a vivid pastel.

The final sister piece was woven with a hand dyed long staple Egyptian Cotton weft.  I pulled out one of the greens and one of the blues from the warp along with the wine red and added in an eggplant purple.  For this final piece I changed up the treadling and found a fancy diamonds weave where the colors seem to nest inside one another: blue green diamonds inside wine red diamonds and wine red diamonds inside blue green diamonds. 

This all EC piece is so soft, stretchy, cushy, and an absolute delight to wrap with.  I think it was my personal favorite of them all, which is funny since I was not at all sure that the bright colors in the weft would work! 

Hand dyed yarn for weft | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Fancy diamond twill on parallel threading | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Unconditional, a handwoven baby wrap | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Unconditional,  a handwoven baby wrap | 14 Mile Farm Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

Draft credit to Eva Stoessl (https://evasweaving.wordpress.com/2012/02/14/8-shaft-woven-scarves-parallel-threading-networked-treadling/)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Draft credit to Eva Stoessl (https://evasweaving.wordpress.com/2012/02/14/8-shaft-woven-scarves-parallel-threading-networked-treadling/)
In Babywearing, Studio, Weaving, Wraps Tags International Babywearing Conference, IBCAtlanta, IBCWeavers2016
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Dyeing a sunset Sky

August 8, 2016 Jasmine Johnson-Kennedy
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska
Hand dyed yarn by 14 Mile Farm : Handweaving and Homesteading in Alaska

This is a sneak peek of what is going onto the loom next.  I've absolutely fallen head over heels in love with dyeing yarn.  The results are not always quite what you imagined they would be, but so far in my experience, they're always delightful.  

So much of weaving is a meticulous craft.  There's lots of math involved.  Attention to detail.  Consistency.  

But dyeing?  It is like painting.  I get to place the colors as I will, in real time, as inspiration strikes. 

It is still slow art, plant fibers have to batch for 24 hours and you don't really see the colors they will end up as until they've been rinsed and dried.  This particular set of skeins had me a little terrified, being already colors outside my comfort zone and then also appearing much brighter and darker before rinsing and when wet.  But they're growing on me!  I can't wait to see how they'll weave up! 

In Studio, Weaving Tags handdyed, dyeing, babywearing weaver, handwoven wrap, baby wrap
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