A Handweaver's Pattern Book
by Marguerite Porter Davison
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Description
"Pick the perfect pattern every time! Sought after for nearly a century, A Handweaver's Pattern Book is the venerable compendium of weaving patterns found in early 20th century America by Marguerite Davison. Weavers of all experience levels can learn everything from basic twills to over-shot and irregular patterns. Often hailed "the handweaver's bible," this collection of patterns is complemented with fascinating textile history and helpful black-and-white photos. Numerous treadlings, show more illustrated with over 1,200 weavings, accompany each design that inspire innovation for expert weavers as well as provide helpful information for weavers who have yet reached that level. Davison also includes a yarn comparison chart in this comprehensive and highly visual guide. Perfect for both commercial and home weavers, this extensive handbook of strikingly diverse patterns will keep any four-harness weaver busy for years to come!" show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Truly, this is the book every weaver should have. It contains, in a simple manner, many of the basic patterns used by every weaver. The instructions, tie-ups, draw downs - well, every aspect of this book makes the weaving of the time honored and time tested patterns a fairly easy process. So much of weaving refers to patterns that are within the cover of this book. Ms. Davison's work to preserve the ageless patterns is well worth the price. Buy it, read it, use it, and pass it on to someone you love in your will.
This is the definitive book on four shaft weaving. It isn't a new publication, and everything illustrated is in black and white, but you could weave forever using nothing but the drafts in this book. It is particularly valuable as a reference for traditional overshot designs, some of them quite large and complex. Hundreds of drafts and lots of historical material as well.
The drafts in this book are intended to be used on a sinking shed loom. You can weave them on a rising shed loom and they will appear on the under surface of the cloth as it is being woven, or just convert the tie ups by putting 0's in all the empty tie up boxes and leaving the boxes with X's in them blank.
The drafts in this book are intended to be used on a sinking shed loom. You can weave them on a rising shed loom and they will appear on the under surface of the cloth as it is being woven, or just convert the tie ups by putting 0's in all the empty tie up boxes and leaving the boxes with X's in them blank.
Sought after for nearly a century, A Handweaver's Pattern Book is the venerable compendium of weaving patterns found in early 20th century America by Marguerite Davison. Weavers of all experience levels can learn everything from basic twills to over-shot and irregular patterns.
THE CLASSIC ... hundreds of 4-harness pattern drafts with photographs of finished woven swatches. Each threading shows several treadling variations. All of the old favorite patterns are here. Yarns and setts are not specified so part of the fun is in trying out your own
Weaver's preferred any edition/printing with the GREEN cover, not the red cover which weavers state is an abridged version of the original. A weaver on Facebook group wrote "The green version and red version are two different books. The green version is the one most beginning weavers want as it has thread by thread patterns to follow. The red version contains profile drafts for weaving overshot or other weave structures. You need to know how to render the drafts from profile to thread by thread in the structure you choose as there is little instruction."
This is the Ur-handbook of four-shaft weaving patterns.
1971 printing
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ThingScore 100
Yeah, I don't know how the anatomy book description got attached to this standard must have weaving book. Odd, but I can't figure out how to get rid of it. Just ignore it.
added by CanadianWeavers
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Handweavers Classics
50 works; 2 members
Author Information
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- A Handweaver's Pattern Book
- Original publication date
- 1944-05; 1944
- Dedication
- To My Father
CHARLES H. PORTER - First words
- Old writers say that the word TWILL, called Tweel by them, comes from the French word "touaille."
- Disambiguation notice
- This entry is for editions of A Handweaver's Pattern Book (1944, 200 weaves) by Marguerite Porter Davison. Do not confuse with The Handweaver's Pattern Directory (2007, 600 weaves) by Anne Dixon.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 990
- Popularity
- 26,454
- Reviews
- 14
- Rating
- (4.69)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 34





























































