Weaving on Mount Vernon's 18th Century Loom

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @mountvernon
    @mountvernon  3 роки тому +6

    Check out an updated video on the process here: ua-cam.com/video/7nI9vQuPM74/v-deo.html

  • @The18thCenturyEnthusiast
    @The18thCenturyEnthusiast 5 років тому +36

    Utterly fascinating! I would LOVE to learn this! My great-great-great grandfather was a Weaver by trade as he came from Germany to Canada then the US. What a wonderful video! Thank you for sharing! :D

  • @amosp9411
    @amosp9411 4 роки тому +16

    "My name is Melissa Weaver Dunning" the way she introduces herself sounds so menacing for some reason and idk why but I like it!

  • @ValkyrieVal3
    @ValkyrieVal3 6 років тому +61

    Today on stuff I never expected to have to look up: videos to work out how a loom in operation sounded.

    • @mountvernon
      @mountvernon  6 років тому +4

      We are glad we could help you with your research.

  • @x2malandy
    @x2malandy 7 років тому +21

    I operated one of these yesterday making a rug. 1800's. It did not use the throw shuttle but a long stick with large notches on the ends. Pretty cool machines.

  • @aimeeobyrne7431
    @aimeeobyrne7431 5 років тому +20

    Great demonstration! I just found that my ancestors were weavers.

    • @Tsukuyomi28
      @Tsukuyomi28 5 років тому +1

      Mine probably made cups. Based on my last name(becherer)

    • @Tsukuyomi28
      @Tsukuyomi28 5 років тому +1

      At least some of them did

  • @MizzKittyBichon
    @MizzKittyBichon 6 років тому +65

    Melissa Weaver Dunning the Weaver. How much more appropriate of a name can you get???

  • @flyingeagle3859
    @flyingeagle3859 6 років тому +13

    Thank you, that was really informative and interesting.

  • @TheDcgj45
    @TheDcgj45 10 років тому +76

    1 shirt a year? wow!

    • @Tsukuyomi28
      @Tsukuyomi28 5 років тому +12

      Dont wear it in the summer and it should last

  • @karnativishnu2103
    @karnativishnu2103 6 років тому +8

    This is very much interesting ,even I am also weaver from India

    • @karnativishnu2103
      @karnativishnu2103 6 років тому

      Please let me know I need any information regarding the same

  • @denisesimpson591
    @denisesimpson591 6 років тому +10

    I'm here from "Empire of Cotton: A Global History" (2016), by Sven Beckert. Weaving, spinning, and the use of looms significantly predated Europe's incorporation of such technology, though more rudimentary: in countries like India, China, and Africa, predating even the Triangular Slave Trade in the 17th and 18th century. Also, some of the American enslaved were drafted as skilled weavers over the historical course of their involuntary servitude.

  • @frozenbear1888
    @frozenbear1888 10 років тому +19

    I am a weaver too, this was very nice to see....I have a question about something I see all the time...why is it that you do not advance the warp so that the shed is closer to you and you don't have to lean so far over to throw...just askin' ! I am also weaving with a linen warp right now and its a pain in the butt !!

    • @dawnklug6986
      @dawnklug6986 10 років тому +7

      The old looms were made for longer weaving and the constant getting up/down to advance short warps was time consuming and the tensioning stayed better as the ratchet systems are not as precise as our modern looms. Also, these ladies show the public what life "REALLY WAS" in the 18th century and back breaking work was the norm.

    • @tradweaver
      @tradweaver 10 років тому +9

      The optimal area for consistent weaving is in the center third of the warp between the breast beam and the beater on most looms - so you don't actually want to advance the warp as far as possible or the weaving will be rather inconsistent. On an old loom like this with a fixed bench, the weaver will not necessarily "fit" the loom and have to bend over more.
      I love weaving with linen, but it does have some special needs!

  • @Lucious410
    @Lucious410 4 роки тому +6

    Well that was interesting. I wonder if they grew and harvested their own flax, or if they imported it from else where.

  • @Pands1031
    @Pands1031 8 років тому +55

    To be completely honest with you guys, when I saw the intro I thought "we aRE OUTGUNNED, OUTMANNED"

  • @loganpollock1689
    @loganpollock1689 7 років тому +4

    I am trying to make authentic linen fabric of the colonial period. Can you tell me the width of the fabric and the warp ends per inch?

  • @sabeldonguez3654
    @sabeldonguez3654 7 років тому +1

    my weaving loom is 45x45x28 inches. i can make 300 pcs. of rugs 18x30" for the whole role of warp.

  • @dipsanjot281
    @dipsanjot281 6 років тому +1

    Very simple weaving

  • @williamwest2005
    @williamwest2005 7 років тому +3

    Wow!,...i tell you what every step of the way to make something back in those days was hard work. Look how far we have come. We are spoiled in today's times......i would love to time warp back in time for a day and just watch. Then time warp back to the Wal-Mart error.....we were pround of the simple thinks back then....

  • @CyclingM1867DubbysMama
    @CyclingM1867DubbysMama 5 років тому +2

    So cool!
    Question - what did the foot pedals do? I assume they had something to do with the heddles?

    • @mountvernon
      @mountvernon  5 років тому +5

      Yes, the foot peddles do have something to do with the heddles. They move the wooden bars that hold the heddles. When you are weaving, the weft thread (or filler) typically goes over one warp thread, then under the next, over one warp thread, under the next, all the way across the cloth. The peddles make it easy to create this over-under pattern because when one heddle bar moves, it separates the warp threads, lifting up every other strand. This creates a space for the weft to pass through. And when the weft goes between the warp threads, it is automatically going over the threads that are on the bottom and under the threads that the peddle lifted up. When the weaver puts the weft through the next time, he or she will push down the other peddle, which causes the warp threads to change places. The threads that were up are now down and vice versa. So now, the weft is going under-over, under-over instead of over-under, over-under. Switching between the two peddles is what holds the weft thread in place.

    • @CyclingM1867DubbysMama
      @CyclingM1867DubbysMama 5 років тому +1

      Thank-you, both. 🙂

    • @mountvernon
      @mountvernon  3 роки тому

      Michelle we just uploaded a new video on the process which demonstrates the role of the heddles better: ua-cam.com/video/7nI9vQuPM74/v-deo.html

  • @rEsonansDx
    @rEsonansDx 7 років тому +3

    Amazing!!!

  • @halanecummings8380
    @halanecummings8380 8 років тому +1

    What do the foot pedals do in this process? Seemed as if the upper movement was doing all the work?
    Also, why the need for humidity?

    • @jessesanders7086
      @jessesanders7086 7 років тому +1

      Halane Cummings the foot pedals are connected to the counterbalanced shafts (the parts that hold all the thread ties or heddles). When the treadle is depressed, one shaft gets pulled down, but because it's connected to the other shaft by the pulley, the other one gets pulled up.

    • @mountvernon
      @mountvernon  3 роки тому

      Halane we just released an updated video about the weaving process that shows how the loom in entirety (including the foot pedals) works: ua-cam.com/video/7nI9vQuPM74/v-deo.html

  • @michellecollie774
    @michellecollie774 6 років тому

    so this would be the equivalent of a 2 shaft loom? because of the 2 foot pegs?

  • @cherylmendenhall8795
    @cherylmendenhall8795 6 років тому +1

    Very interesting!

  • @michaelraj8407
    @michaelraj8407 6 років тому +1

    good.iam from tamilnadu INDIA.iam from weaver family.today any new technical ........??

  • @Ritercrazy
    @Ritercrazy 6 років тому +4

    I would love to have a loom.

  • @deapthynka1
    @deapthynka1 9 років тому

    Very interesting.

  • @Asugiart
    @Asugiart 6 років тому +4

    i come here because of manga "dr.Stone". lol. so that is a loom create by using linen clothing. now i know. hahaha

  • @The_Great_Hejaz
    @The_Great_Hejaz 7 років тому

    Nostalgia, at that time every thing was blessed

  • @randombeing8036
    @randombeing8036 4 роки тому

    00:51

  • @girlybaker1241
    @girlybaker1241 7 років тому +5

    these look exactly like the looms at my school haha

  • @sissyboo4747
    @sissyboo4747 10 років тому

    Hi like your 90s shirt from the past

  • @شاهینگیوهچیان
    @شاهینگیوهچیان 6 років тому

    excellent

  • @tigersodham3611
    @tigersodham3611 5 років тому

    Hello I am weaver from india. ...

  • @Mdm.BlueBerry
    @Mdm.BlueBerry 5 років тому +1

    One shirt per year wtf

  • @LosMachinesTV
    @LosMachinesTV 10 років тому

    Weaver's my middle name!

  • @lawrencescales9864
    @lawrencescales9864 6 років тому +5

    One shirt per year? I can’t say I’m surprised but... that’s awful. Either way, she’s a great weaver.

  • @deapthynka1
    @deapthynka1 9 років тому

    Very interesting.