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Newsletters

Whatcom Weavers Guild publishes a monthly newsletter

September through June of each year with periodic updates and

supplements sent to the group.  Members receive notification via

​email of each monthly newsletter publication.

February 2023 Newsletter

2/5/2023

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Get warped, not weft behind!

​How is writing like weaving? Well, often rectangular in format; writing a newsletter item, like a fiber project, takes some planning, maybe a little research, inspiration, but mostly, sitting down and getting started! Start with step one – be that getting out the yarn, looking at colors, pulling out books or magazines for drafts or inspiration, editing a prior piece, trying it again with a new approach. Of course, a deadline is always a super motivation…

Speaking of deadlines, inspiration and motivation, have you been thinking about our Annual Guild challenge? Me too – but now, it’s time for me to motivate! Just to review, this year, our Guild is taking the opportunity to show what we do in a display booth at the 2023 ANWG Conference, June 11-17, 2023, in Bend, Oregon. (ANWG = Association of Northwest Weavers Guilds, pronounced an-wig). A number of Whatcom Guild members are making plans to attend the conference, but all of us can be there in spirit and in fiber, by creating a project for display in our booth.

Annual challenge doesn’t mean the project takes all year. Just saying. Doesn’t mean the piece has to be big. The theme for this year’s challenge is Color and Community. Using the theme colors chosen for the Conference, (Rust, Purple, Blue, Green, Gold), create a project that reflects your interpretation of our fiber community.

Several Study groups, as well as individuals, are working on projects using these colors. The Tapestry weavers are working on their pieces, and the Rigid Heddle Group is going strong. At least one person in the Jane Stafford Zoom Group is weaving a shadow weave in these five colors, and I have seen it. Lovely!

The band weaving group is re-convening in February, with room for more members. If you want to join up for inkle, card weaving, small heddle weaving, let me know. Let’s get together to share patterns, explore colors and yarns, get warped, and weave! A collection of bands, bookmarks, shoelaces, bracelets, key fobs, will help fill out our booth display – small, portable weaves are so much fun to do, and fit my bandwidth! I’m also planning crackle towels in theme colors, and I’ll have woven bands to sew on for hanging loops, when I hem the towels.
​

The difference between writing and weaving? No fringe to twist, no wet finishing, and no hemming!

​

Carol Berry
2022-2023 President, Whatcom Weavers Guild 
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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January 2023 Newsletter

1/8/2023

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​Color and Community

What do Tyvek festival bracelets, broccoli, and fudge have in common? And what do they have to do with fiber arts? As you wonder, I’ll try to wander through an explanation.

In mid-December 2022, memories of dry, crumbly fudge and fudge that never set, to be eaten only with a spoon, put me on a quest for the perfect recipe. Candy thermometer, kitchen timer… the downside of successful fudge research is, too much fudge. Learned: following a recipe carefully, using specified ingredients yields success. Also learned: a simple microwave recipe made fudge just as good as the complicated stove-top version. Maybe better. Intention for 2023: eat more vegetables. (More about this later.)
​
The last day of 2022 involved neutralizing and disposing of a spent indigo vat, scrubbing dye pots, wiping down counter tops, and making a fresh indigo vat. Learned from the fudge research: review the recipe, gather and prepare the equipment, plan for enough time to follow the recipe for the vat and the procedure for dyeing… Happiness is the magic of an indigo vat that behaves just the way it is supposed to! Learned: wear gloves right from the start, to avoid Indigo fingers.

I haven’t attended a Festival in quite a while, but Festival Bracelets, the Tyvek kind that stick together and don’t come undone until you cut them? Yes! The perfect tag for skeins of yarn going through a scour, mordant and dyebath. Labeled with a sharpie, you know what you did when all is done. Check out the three samples below:
  • Handspun yarn by Leslie Ann Bestor, dyed with Osage Orange (golden yellow) Indigo (blue) and Osage with an Indigo overdye (green).
  • The first dye baths of 2023! Weighed, measured, brought to temperature, steeped, timed, notes taken. It’s a practice, the unexpected will certainly happen, but nice to start the new year with a success. *Note – these are samples of three of the five colors of the ANWG Conference.
  • Rusty red (Cutch) and brilliant purple (Madder with an indigo overdye) will fill out the circle. Look for updates, you may want to participate in this community project!

And broccoli? Washed, chopped, placed in a covered microwave-safe glass dish on high for 90 seconds. Perfectly steamed, perfectly timed. More vegetables eaten; less time spent cooking. More dyeing, more weaving, and no more fudge for me for a while!

Wishing you all the best in 2023!

​
Carol Berry
2022-2023 President, Whatcom Weavers Guild 
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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December 2022 Newsletter

12/10/2022

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Mysteries Revealed

Thanks to experienced and sharing instructors, I was able to weave a willow bark basket and unlock some of the mysteries of Jamtlandsdrall/Crackle Weave, all in the last three weeks. It may be a while before I try to make another basket. My appreciation for the basket makers art has only increased with this experience. Judy Zugish grew the willow, harvested and peeled the bark, then dried it for the requisite number of years, before leading us step by step through the day-long process of weaving a little gem of a basket, perfect for holding a tea light. A fun day, and a charming holiday centerpiece. 

Crackle Weave (AKA Jamtlandsdrall, in Sweden) has been a mystery to me for years. Thanks to Liz Moncrief’s workshop, turned study group led by Sheri Ward, the darkness has been lifted. I get it about the incidentals. I finished my samples. And labeled them! The really cool thing (well, one of the cool things) about Crackle Weave, is it can be changed in so many ways, even on the same warp, depending on weft, color changes, tabbies or not… I’m looking at the ANWG Conference Colors and considering a set of towels. Or a scarf. Four blocks on four shafts opens up a new world of possibilities. Thanks so much to a fellow guild member for the loan of a portable floor loom. It was especially fun with several other Guild members taking the workshop. 

At the same time, there is a simple and exciting “Weaving Adventure” happening in my studio, designed by a new-ish weaver and friend. Starting with yarns in colors she likes, my friend developed a design for a scarf, for a rigid heddle loom. She wound a wrap, from which the loom was warped and the weaving begun. You don’t always have to use a complex weave structure. Plain weave can certainly appear complex in color, texture and design. By the way, most of the yarns came from Evie’s Mom’s Stash Sale. (If you know, you know…) Sweet to be using them in such a pretty project. 

A shout out to Lynn and Wendy who have been organizing the Guild Library Books. For those who haven’t had a chance to visit the Library, it’s easy, and we have a number of newly acquired books, including some knitting and crochet resources that weavers will find useful. There is also equipment available for loan, that can help new weavers get started. Read through the member PDF that was emailed last week for all the information, including who to contact with questions. 
Here's hoping your December is safe, happy, and full of all the warm fuzzies.​


Warmly,
Carol Berry
2022-2023 President, Whatcom Weavers Guild 
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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November 2022 Newsletter

10/30/2022

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Wooly Weather

Rain at last. What a joy to spend a morning heating up the kitchen with soup on the stove and cookies baking in the oven. The two little 3-year-old apple trees in my front yard yielded 16 very nice eating apples this year! Time to think about blankets, pull the wool scarves into rotation again, and search out the fingerless mitts. Spring bulbs (the kind you plant in the fall because March is going to come and tulips will be needed for emotional support), have been ordered, and should arrive any day, so I’m hoping for a few warmish, dryish days for planting.

Mostly, I am ready for the indoor activity season, excited to try new things and learn new weaves. Making a basket in a workshop at the Jansen Center is on my schedule. Delving into the weave structure known as Crackle, or Jamtlandsvav, has been a wish for a few years now, and I’m signed up for a study group. I am so glad to be approaching this complex weave in a group setting. Don’t go to a scary place all alone, right? Four blocks on four shafts, with “incidental threads”?!! Staying calm. Taking it one step at a time. Trying not to get stuck on choosing the warp yarn. Measuring and beaming the warp. Only then taking on threading the heddles (Four different blocks! Incidentals! Yikes.) Re-writing the threading by hand on large graph paper is how I tackle it, then threading the heddles one section at a time, checking off each group as I go. Paying attention to ergonomics. Protein snacks, not sugar… no podcasts or books on tape while I’m threading…
​
Loom mechanics are not hard for me but remembering a sequence of numbers for long enough to treadle a pattern unit, especially with two shuttles, and tabbies in between… Having found that others share some of these same challenges – there has been talk of a “Dream Weavers” Study Group session or series, sharing methods for managing threading and treadling when the challenges of a busy life, household member’s needs, or brain fog make it harder to coordinate mind, eyes, hands and feet. Anyone else have a hard time with this sometimes? Let’s talk. We are in this together.



Warmly,

Carol Berry
2022-2023 President, Whatcom Weavers Guild 
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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October 2022 Newsletter

10/4/2022

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​Important News!

The Whatcom Weavers Guild October 15, 2022 meeting and Program will take place at the Jansen Art Center. Members and Guests are invited to attend in person. NOTE: This will be a hybrid meeting! A Zoom link will be sent to all members during the week before the meeting, so that members unable to attend in person will have access. The Meeting, and the Program, featuring Artist Flora Carlisle-Kovacz, will also be recorded, for Weaver’s Guild members to view later. Flora’s beautiful Felted artworks are on display at the Jansen Art Center now through October 15, and can be viewed on the Jansen Center’s website here.
In other news, it is now officially Fall 2022, unless you are in the Southern Hemisphere, where it is officially spring. For those who like to count threads and other things, it has been 24 months since we learned that Zoom is a thing we can do, online workshops work, and that fiber sharing and learning can stretch all the way around the globe! We’ve been weaving, and felting, and knitting, and crocheting, and dyeing and more.

We have kept our fiber community strung together (pun intended) even when we couldn’t physically be together. Can we keep that community together as group gatherings become the norm? I, for one, will continue to enjoy Program Speakers we wouldn’t be able to bring here, and stay connected with weaving pals I wouldn’t know if we hadn’t been forced to try a new way of meeting. Still, it is such a relief to have options, and employ the “Weavers Handshake” (If you know, you know) once again.



Warmly,

Carol Berry
WWG President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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September 2022 Newsletter

8/28/2022

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​I just pulled half a warp out of the heddles. Again. It shouldn’t be this way. It’s a simple block weave. M’s & O’s on 4 shafts, a favorite basic structure. The yarn is unbleached 22/2 cottolin, my go-to for towels: It’s versatile, works with a wild variety of weft fibers, colors, textures and weights, behaves itself when measuring and beaming… New weft colors have arrived, and old favorites are waiting on the shelf. I want to weave. I keep getting the blocks mixed up, and having to un-thread. (!) What could this recalcitrant warp be telling me? I love dressing looms. Really. A naked loom usually doesn’t sit around here long. This warp was planned and measured mid-June. Beamed in July. The threading has been going on for weeks. And therein lies the problem. Summer lack of focus. It’s warm and sunny, and the garden calls. And then the weaving calls. The dry days make firing up the dye pots very attractive. Another reason to neglect the weaving and the gardening. As a result the new raised bed isn’t filled with soil yet, the other one is weedy. Watering happens, but bigger projects just aren’t getting finished. The urgency of Fall brought on by the first rain of the season just hasn’t hit yet.

And you know what? It can all wait, at least until after Labor Day, right? September, even more than January, feels like the start of the new year. Time to get a new notebook, sharpen my pencils, and maybe get a new pair of shoes. That warp is evidently saying it’s too early to focus. Soon enough we’ll be back on schedule with monthly meetings, programs, outreach projects and regular study groups! You will want to read below, review the schedule carefully and make notes in your calendar. There is much variety in our programming in the coming year. Some meetings will have both in-person and remote options. Some will be held at the Jansen Center, some in Bellingham. Some will be all Zoom, with presenters from far away. Some Guild programs will be hands-on, and workshops are being announced. You can expect some more outdoor gatherings as the weather allows, and the Jansen Center has classes and workshops coming up too.

​
​At the moment, that warp is getting a rest. The garden tools are in the shed. The dye pots are off the burners. A walk downtown, and new shoes for Fall are on the agenda.


See you in September!

​

Carol Berry
WWG President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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August 2022 Newsletter

8/13/2022

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​Seated in the shade, pitcher of iced tea, sprinkler going under the blueberry bushes… a black-capped chickadee is enjoying the water spray and cooling breeze with me. A dye project is soaking in its final rinse. All that’s left to do is pull it out of the (cool) water bath and hang the skeins up to dry.

The weld in my garden (which yields an almost neon-bright yellow with calcium carbonate added to the dyebath) is six feet tall. Sadly, my Japanese Indigo seeds I started in May never germinated. It just wasn’t warm enough for them this spring. However, the dyers chamomile starts, given to me last spring by another guild member/gardener/dyer came back in force. For the most part, I purchase the plant dye materials I use, but growing what I can is satisfying, and a way to feel connected to artisans through the ages and all over the world.

Weaving Around the World seems to be a theme for our Guild Programs this year. We have a full schedule, not just weaving of course, including a couple of hands-on programs, if we can safely meet in person. We had a fun get together at Marine Park in July and met some new members in person! Our August “Swap, Shop, and Social” will be an opportunity to re-home fiber supplies and equipment and see old and new friends. There will also be show and tell, and information about study groups, mentoring, and community projects. Zoom meetings and programs will resume in September, with some monthly meetings combining in-person and online options.

This outdoor weather won’t last forever. We’ll be planning and settling down to indoor projects before you know it. For now, there is iced tea, the latest Handwoven Magazine just arrived, and enough blueberries that I can share some with the birds. Fiber life is a good life, and it’s my life!

Warmly,

​Carol Berry

WWG President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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June 2022 Newsletter

6/13/2022

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​This is my second spring in Bellingham, and I think I was too immersed in settling in last year to really notice the colors around me. I think I was absorbing the meta scapes, the mountains and rivers, the lakes, and the ocean. This year, however, the newness has worn off and I'm seeing the movement of the seasons through the landscape.

What I'm seeing is a riot of color. I walk my neighborhood regularly with my dogs and the last month has been an explosion - so many shades of pink and purple! And then the greens as the leaves stretched out. I've been astonished at the variety and number of rhododendrons in this area, sometimes I take different routes just to see what other neighborhoods look like. Of course, certain color combinations make me wonder how I could weave them.

The pups and I also hike quite a bit up in the woods and have come across beautiful displays of color. I find great delight in noticing new colors unfold and I've been taking lots of pictures for inspiration. I came upon this particular patch of blooms on a hillside and immediately recognized that I already had been drawn to that color combo before and had some beautiful 2/18 merino in those exact shades. I'm now contemplating how I will weave it; my original impulse is to weave a shawl with these colors as a woven-in tablet band a la Inge Dam. I've never tried this before, so it would be a stretch, but I do love a challenge! Where it falls in the long queue remains to be seen, perhaps some time for research and marination.

The other thing that I am noticing with wider eyes this year is just how amazing our guild is. The strength, vitality, and longevity of a guild lie in the active participation of members, and I really saw that in our elections last month. Many guilds struggle as the same few people do all the work, and we have a large guild with many hands needed to keep thriving. But what I noticed is that several board members were ready to be done with their position and instead of leaving the board, they chose to take on a new role. Brava to them and those who are continuing in their board positions. Thank you to those who stepped up for the first time, we value your input and know that you have a great support system as you learn your new role.

​A big shout out to Jan Burton and Mary Oates who are retiring after many years of service to the board and the guild. Thank you both for all you have put into the guild, your contributions have enriched and strengthened the foundation of our guild. Many thanks, too, for Carol Berry and her willingness to continue to lead our guild, ensuring a strong and smooth transition to the future. I'm grateful for the way she warmly welcomes people into the guild and enthusiastically encourages and supports people to be active weavers.

Yup, we've got a pretty great group here. Enthusiasm and support, a riot of colors. What more could we ask for? I hope to see many of you at our June meeting which will be held by Zoom, I'm especially looking forward to seeing what you did for your guild challenge. (For those feeling impossibly behind on this, just know that I'm right there with you - still haven't wound the warp but I'm sure I'll have it done in time!)

​
LeslieAnn
WGG Vice President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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May 2022 Newsletter

5/10/2022

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​Garden Report: Growing Color!

There are actual, true-life blossoms on my strawberry plants. These plants survived the snow and deep frost of winter 2021-2022 and the frosts of April. The rhubarb is high.  The consistent cold and damp have helped the tulips last longer this year, disguising the weeds. There are tiny worms of an unknown type, eating a few of the leaves on my apple trees. I have been picking them off, but a more serious approach may be called for. A solution that won’t discourage the bees. This is the third year for those two tiny trees. Year one: 12 blossoms, 11 apples. Year two: 5 blossoms, 3 apples. I learned I should have thinned the baby apples down to one per fruit spur the year before. This year: 56 blossoms! My darling husband pointed out that if I can count the blossoms on my apple trees… Let’s just say there is no need to learn how to weave my own bushel baskets just yet.


Also coming back in the garden are some very robust dyers’ Chamomile plants, given to me last year by another Guild member. The Weld has self-seeded and has grown about a foot in the last week. A new friend with farm connections has offered me boxes of onion skins! Temperatures have warmed up enough to be comfortable in the dye studio, for review some of the lessons from Last year’s Maiwa natural dye workshop. A warp, and small sample skeins have been dyed, in Cutch, Madder, Cochineal, Sappanwood, Lac, and a combination of madder and lac exhaust baths. The April meeting Show and Tell included a rug made of black wool, with pattern bands colored with natural dyes, and dying and block printing are happening in the Jansen Center Dye studio as well, or so I hear.

Here's to the color in our lives, whether it’s tulips or yarns!

​Carol Berry

WWG President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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April 2022 Newsletter

4/3/2022

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​New Beginnings

Daffodils are blooming, Rhubarb is poking up. A brown bunny has been visiting my garden. He or she is welcome to nibble on the leaves of the emerging dandelions and the weedy strands of grass I haven’t gotten out to clean up. (It’s been chilly!) I am always happy to see dandelions because they provide the first food in spring for ground-dwelling bees and other pollinators. And my bunny friend. Tulips are getting ready, and a friend gave me Dahlia tubers and seeds as a birthday present. Anticipation of color keeps me going. Tulips soon, Dahlia and Zinnias later. Planting Japanese Indigo again this year, too.

The colors of the Double Rainbow workshop were knockout! The workshop was a stretching experience, I am inspired to continue and overjoyed with the tools I now have for color combinations in cottolin. I want to do the workshop exercises all over again, in other color options. Speaking of inspiration in Double Weave, the March Program with Anastasia Azure was another knockout. Double Weave sculpture and jewelry, inspired by the shapes and colors of flowers and the sea. And who knew acid dyes will color nylon yarns and monofilament?!


The Conference colors for ANWG 2023 are giving me ideas too. Goal: Plant dyed yarns in the conference colors. I just this minute got out my dye journal for a look at the samples created in last Spring’s Maiwa online workshop. Excited to discover I already have samples and the recipes for plant dye versions of the conference colors. A few degrees warmer weather means getting out into the Dye Studio (AKA garage and garden shed) to see if I can coax these colors out of plant material and into yarn again.
​
Joy of color!

​Carol Berry

WWG President
​


To read the entire newsletter please click here.
To see details about our upcoming meetings and events please click here.
To see who our board members are please click here.
To browse through our "Resources" page please click here.

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