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Weaving Iridescence: Color Play for the Handweaver [Mīkstie vāki]

4.03/5 (53 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 136 pages, height x width x depth: 282x214x8 mm, weight: 463 g, 26 Color Illustrations, 160 Color Photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Stackpole Books
  • ISBN-10: 0811716287
  • ISBN-13: 9780811716284
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 28,70 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 136 pages, height x width x depth: 282x214x8 mm, weight: 463 g, 26 Color Illustrations, 160 Color Photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Stackpole Books
  • ISBN-10: 0811716287
  • ISBN-13: 9780811716284
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Iridescent fabric shimmers and glows, changing colors depending on how the light hits it. Different colors appear in the folds and pleats, adding surprising layers of color to fabric. To the uninformed it appears magical and difficult, but the truth is that weaving iridescent fabric is accessible to any handweaver who knows the tricks.

Bobbie Irwin has been teaching the techniques for weaving iridescence in person and through articles for more than ten years. In this book, she delivers her most comprehensive course yet, covering the details from how to evaluate and choose yarn to achieve your desired effect to the ways weave structure affects iridescence to the best uses for your iridescent fabric. Hands-on project instructions will have you exploring what you've learned right away.

If you have been looking to add some shimmer to your weaving, this is the only book you will ever need!  

Recenzijas

Now thanks to Bobbie Irwin, I can create my own iridescent fabric with her book Weaving Iridescence: Colorplay for the Handweaver. The book starts off with explaining iridescence, optics of light and color. The photographs help to interpret the results as well as give inspiration to your fiber choice, thread size and weave structure. Blue boxes highlight the information of the chapters. Bobbie touches on getting the most out of iridescence with sewing garments, spinning, dyeing and knitting. Then, she shows you how to achieve this technique using a loom that requires from 4 to 8 shafts. The projects include color gamp napkins, a double weave scarf in a 4 and 6 shaft version, 4 shaft scarves using 3 and 4 color effects, clasping, vest fabric in double-weave and lightweight huck yardage. She closes with a note on photography and the ins and outs of getting a good photograph of iridescent fabric. The photographs are well done and as I said before, lends them to motivate your creativeness. This is a one of a kind book to take your weaving and color appreciation to the next level. -- Paula Moliver Twice in my weaving career, I've accidentally woven iridescent cloth. Both times, I chose a weft color based on a whim and ended up with magical, shimmering cloth. Bobbie Irwin, weaver and author of the aptly titled Weaving Iridescence, stumbled upon iridescence in a similar way. Her journey began, as great weaving discoveries often do, while sampling on the loom. Irwin decided to combine magenta with chartreuse, two colors she used frequently in her weaving with other colors but never together. The result was iridescent cloth and a desire to study this phenomenon, which is ultimately how this wonderful book came to be. Although Irwin is a master of all things iridescent, even those beyond cloth, she makes few assumptions about the knowledge of the reader. The earliest chapters in her book are all about education. She explains what iridescence is and how it relates to other "-escence" words such as opalescence and luminescence. The book also explores the nature of light and color, giving the reader a good foundation of knowledge on which to stand before getting to the meat of the subject at hand. The rest of the book is devoted to the subject of iridescence and how it works in weaving. Irwin teaches her readers the "rules" of iridescence (and how most of them can be broken) and how to choose colors, yarns, and weave structures to get this effect. She also, very interestingly, explains what iridescence isn't, giving examples of fabrics that are lustrous and often beautiful but not truly iridescent. The book ends with five projects designed to help the reader learn more about the nature of iridescence on the loom. Such a book cannot truly be successful without good photography--and lots of it. As beautiful as iridescence is, it's also notoriously difficult to capture on film, but photographer Reed Irwin did this spectacularly. The book is full of gorgeous fabrics that seem to shimmer even on the printed page. As Irwin mentions in her "Note on Photography" at the end of the book, this is no accident--she actually delayed writing the book until photo technology was developed that could adequately capture this phenomenon. She also gives plenty of tips and tricks for any amateur iridescence photographers out there. This book is a stunning work on a subject that has intrigued and delighted many a weaver throughout history. It is a must-have for any weaver who wants to harness the magic of iridescence. -- Christina Garton, Handwoven

Acknowledgments iv
Introduction 1(2)
Chapter 1 What Is Iridescence?
3(4)
Natural Iridescence
3(1)
Iridescence in Fabric
4(3)
Chapter 2 Understanding Optics and Color
7(10)
The Nature of Light
7(2)
How We See
9(1)
Understanding Color
10(3)
Color Systems
13(4)
Chapter 3 Exploring Common Beliefs about Iridescence
17(16)
Choosing Colors
18(5)
Color Saturation
23(1)
Value
24(2)
Crossing Solid Colors
26(1)
Luster
27(2)
Fiber Choice
29(1)
Thread Size
29(2)
What about Plain Weave?
31(1)
Balanced Weaves
31(2)
Chapter 4 Additional Color Considerations
33(22)
Dealing with High-Contrast Values
33(3)
Color Mixing
36(4)
Working with Multiple Colors
40(10)
Warp versus Weft---Does It Matter?
50(5)
Chapter 5 Choosing Yarns
55(8)
A Matter of Twist
56(1)
Comments on Certain Fibers and Yarns
57(6)
Chapter 6 The Influence of Weave Structure
63(14)
Choosing a Structure
63(1)
Twill Weaves
64(2)
Striped Fabrics
66(1)
Pile, Lace, and Supplementary-Thread Weaves
67(1)
Balanced Weaves
67(1)
Unbalanced Weaves
68(4)
Double Weave
72(1)
Complex Weaves
73(4)
Chapter 7 Specialty Fabrics
77(20)
Sheer Fabrics
77(5)
Moire Effects
82(1)
Pleated Fabrics
82(6)
Pile Fabrics
88(1)
Satin/Sateen
89(1)
Capturing the Natural Spectrum
90(7)
Chapter 8 Focus on Fashion
97(8)
Choosing a Pattern
98(1)
Sewing with Handwoven Fabric
98(5)
Caring for Your Iridescent Fabrics
103(1)
Accessories for Your Iridescent Fashions
103(2)
Chapter 9 Options for Spinners, Dyers, and Knitters
105(6)
Spinning for Iridescence
105(1)
Dye Your Own Color-Play Yarns
106(1)
Iridescent Knitted Fabrics
107(4)
Chapter 10 What Isn't Iridescent?
111(4)
Chapter 11 Projects
115(16)
Spectrum Napkins
116(2)
Double-Weave Scarf
118(4)
Three Scarves on One Warp
122(4)
Vest Fabric in Double Weave
126(2)
Huck Yardage
128(3)
A Note on Photography 131(1)
Recommended Resources 132
Bobbie Irwin has been studying and teaching how to weave iridescence for more than 10 years, and it has become her most popular workshop. She has written many articles for Handwoven magazine and is the author of three books: Twist and Twine, The Spinner's Companion, and Twined Rag Rugs. She resides in Montrose, Colorado.