25223 Blended Drafts
Class | Available
Registration deadline: 7/10
Weavers are always looking for new threadings, new tie-ups and new treadlings. Blended drafts have it all! Participants will actually be taking two different four shaft drafts and turn them into one completely different eight shaft weave. In the first class students will bring regular pencils, colored pencils and erasers (!) to class and experiment with a variety of possibilities The instructor will provide the graph paper and extra colored pencils. Each student will choose one of their favorite drafts to take home and turn it into an actual threading. For the second class they will arrive with their design dressed and ready to weave on an eight shaft loom.
Bring lunch or purchase locally for class on 7/23.
AGE: Adults
NOTE: Class starts later on 7/16: from 1:00 to 3:30
- MATERIALS FEE: $5.00 paid to instructor for handouts, graph paper
- STUDENT SUPPLIES: Instructor will contact students ahead of time
Mimi Smith
My first interest in textiles began with sewing for myself and two little daughters which culminated in a desire to create the actual fabric. Belonging to a craft group and meeting several weavers encouraged me to take classes in weaving. I was soon enthralled with the process and started to weave scarves and sweater-vests which I sold at the Clothesline for several years.
However, I began to feel isolated weaving alone. I joined the Weavers Guild and through them started on a long journey of teaching in various venues. These included stints with the Rochester Presbyterian Home, The Psychogeriatric Unit of the Rochester Psychiatric Center, Rochester Museum and Science Center, and various fiber shops. The teaching has been most rewarding and satisfying, and is definitely my niche. I have taught at regional guilds and national conferences such as MAFA, MidWest, Complex Weavers, and Convergence. However, my favorite teaching places have been at the Weaving Center and the Creative Workshop of the Memorial Art Gallery. Here I have a chance to teach new students and watch their delight as they discover patterns, textures and color in weaving. I'm able to encourage returning weavers to stretch themselves and develop their creativity. Weaving is so open-ended that there is a place for almost everyone in the myriad of possibilities it offers.
In the recent past I have increased my teaching of textiles to include paper making, felting, and marbling. The exploration of new techniques constantly intrigues me, and I try to combine them with my continual fascination of weaving.