I found the instructions very clear thank you. It seems that others are a bit confused, I wouldn't really call it weaving, I think it's probably closer to braiding, as there is no weft, however, I maybe wrong in my thinking, at any rate it's quite interesting. I know this video was done a long time ago, but I thank you for sharing this technique anyway. Cheers!
Hi, great vid. What is the history behind this. I recently saw a book about it, but it seems to be an old historic form of fabric making. Thanks for keeping it going.
I found the instructions very clear thank you. It seems that others are a bit confused, I wouldn't really call it weaving, I think it's probably closer to braiding, as there is no weft, however, I maybe wrong in my thinking, at any rate it's quite interesting. I know this video was done a long time ago, but I thank you for sharing this technique anyway. Cheers!
This is a wonderful tutorial. Cleanly explained. Thank you so much! Can't wait to try this.
Hi, great vid. What is the history behind this. I recently saw a book about it, but it seems to be an old historic form of fabric making. Thanks for keeping it going.
To ease everyone's confusion, this isn't weaving, this is sprang. It says so in the description.
Start from the beginning. Doing the figure 8 and how u put it on the loom
What happens when you meet in middle/need to bind off?
New to me! Interesting. Sent the URL to friend who is a genius with tri-loom.
its all warp?
Yes, Sprang is also called warp only weaving
I like to weaving, but I don’t know why you make it look so complicate for a simple pattern.
Yoly Sab This is a technique called sprang. It’s not weaving
Technically, this isn’t weaving... it is called ‘sprang’ and is warp twisting.
This makes no sense. Where is the weft
No weft. Unless the bind off at the middle counts as weft.
Sprang doesn’t use a weft. The fabric is formed by the warp threads interlacing.
Too complicate for beginner
Margaret Kemp This isn’t the first video. That’s the one you need to see first.