{"id":4048,"date":"2023-06-09T05:15:00","date_gmt":"2023-06-09T05:15:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/handweavingacademystatic.memberhost.io\/?p=4048"},"modified":"2023-08-04T21:28:05","modified_gmt":"2023-08-04T21:28:05","slug":"all-looms-are-good-looms","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/handweavingacademy.com\/all-looms-are-good-looms\/","title":{"rendered":"All Looms are Good Looms"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Weaving was far from my first love. When I started weaving, I had already been involved in fiber arts for almost a lifetime, I started to stab cloth with needles and sewing thread at 6, I knitted and crocheted by 9 and when I was 10 I took my first sewing class. My life is a trail of unwashed roving, tangled yarns, dyed hands, and bins of unfinished sewing projects. Neither my small living spaces nor my relationships could allow for the space and expense of a bulky loom, so weaving sat off to the side as that one fiber thing I hadn\u2019t really gotten into. When I learned I could weave without the need for a large floor loom on a modest rigid heddle, a whole new world opened up before my eyes and I was hooked.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
What I didn\u2019t realize was that weaving in America also has a bit of a culture where there are master weavers and all kinds of opinions about when weaver became one and that shaft envy was considered inevitable. I had never encountered that with any other fiber craft: you could knit garter stitch scarves and still be a knitter, you could crochet hats for 20 years or 4 months, and both crocheters found their common ground when passion met passion. When I met my first real-life weaver a bookstore and told them I had a rigid heddle loom she immediately went cold. A wall came up in our conversation and I realized that weaving had a different culture than the other fiber arts I had previously enjoyed. Even after years I wonder, am I yet a REAL weaver? And if not, what am I? <\/p>\n\n\n\n
One thing I adore about the Handweaving Academy community is that it puts aside the concept of loom hierarchy. In my experience in other forums, magazines, and in advertising, it\u2019s not uncommon to see loom types or the number of shafts you have presented as a ladder to climb. <\/p>\n\n\n