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HEDDLE PREPARATION
Choose the approximate number of heddles you wish to use. If you have
planned a narrow warp, make sure you leave some heddles at the far
sides of the harness sticks between the hooks and the ends of the harness
sticks. For balance, there should be approximately equal numbered
groups of unused heddles on both sides of each harness. In some cases,
such as a very wide warp with a lot of unused heddles on the ends of the
harnesses, you may need to tie each group of unused heddles into a tight
bundle with tie tapes or string to keep them from falling off the ends of
the harness sticks or you may need to take heddles off the loom. In the
first six months of using a new loom with polyester heddles, the heddles
stretch out to adjust to the harnesses and the heddles on each harness get
stretched out to different sizes. For this reason, we do not recommend
removing heddles from the loom for six months. When heddles are
removed, they should be marked so they can be returned to the same
harnesses. For the same reason, once the heddles have been on the loom
for awhile, it is not a good idea to switch heddles to different harnesses.
Mixing them up once they have been stretched could affect the evenness
of the shed. What some weavers do with wide warps, in order to avoid
having to take off extra heddles, is to distribute the unused heddles
among the threaded heddles as the threading is taking place.
THREADING THE HARNESSES
Now insert the threading hook through the eye of the first heddle you
wish to thread. Hook the first thread and pull it out through the heddle.
Continue with the threading until all ends are threaded through their
respective heddles. In a plain weave, the threading sequence will look
something like this: 4, 3, 2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 1, ..... meaning that
the first thread will go through a heddle in the fourth harness, the second
thread will go through a heddle in the third harness, the third thread
through the second harness, the fourth through the first harness, and so
on .....
REPLACING THE BEATER AND SLEYING THE REED
Now replace the beater making sure the metal height adjuster is seated
properly in the slot. Sley the warp ends through the reed. Some
weavers start from the right side, some from the left, some in he middle
..... but in all cases, be sure to measure accurately before starting so that
the warp will be centered in the reed. Weavers have various ways of
positioning the reed for sleying. The AVL Home Loom comes with a pin
located on the left side of the loom that can be placed through the frame
of the loom and into the left beater leg, thereby holding the beater in the
middle position. You may then wish to remove the top of the beater and
slant the reed away from you, to further assist you in the sleying process.
Make sure the cloth beam pawl is disengaged from the cloth beam
ratchet. (You’ll find these at the right end of the cloth beam .... when
the cloth beam can move freely in either direction, then you know the
pawl is properly disengaged.)