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Saturday, July 12, 2014

Pssst...They're called warps and wefts (and sometimes even woofs)

It's been ages since I did a "Pssst" post. For you newcomers, this series is devoted to explaining design terms, often furniture- or upholstery- related, although I've thrown in a few other oddball terms from time to time. Today's terms come from the parlance of textile design.

The warp is the lengthwise core support of a fabric. They tend to be stronger and more coarse to hold up to tight stretching. They form the base upon which the pattern of the fabric is woven and give it body and form.

The weft (sometimes called the woof, although this is a somewhat archaic term) is woven in between the warp threads to create various patterns and textures. The weft is sometimes considered "filler" thread.

The weft is woven through the warp by means of a shuttle. A shed, a vertical space between the raised and unraised warp threads, is formed to allow the shuttle to carry weft yarn through. A single crossing of the weft from one side to another is called a pick.

The word weft is derived from the Old English word wefan, meaning "to weave," while the word warp come from an Old Norse word varp, meaning "the cast of a net." In other words, the warp acts as a net to hold the weft so they will not escape and unravel.

From craftscotland.com



White warp with blue weft
wisegeek.com


All designs are created by weaving the weft yarn over and under the warp threads in a repeated pattern. Pretty amazing when you stop to think about it...


warpandweft.com

warpandweft.com

warpandweft.com

warpandweft.com

2 comments:

  1. I learned something new today! Thanks for sharing.
    Have a good weekend and stay cool up there, Dana.
    xo, T.

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    1. Probably totally useless information, but that's fun sometimes. :)

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