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Mar 30

Ikat Weaving in Laos

My weft ikat weaving

I fell apart weaving in Laos. It really didn’t matter that I’d been weaving  more than half my life. When it came to weaving  weft ikat in fine silk (50 ends per inch) in the humid heat of Luang Prabang,  I felt like a rank beginner.  I signed up for a day-long class at Ock Pop Tok’s Living Crafts Centre so I could learn a few traditional weaves, and to experience the magic of Ock Pop Tok. I was ready to be enriched about traditional weft ikat.  (The Centre, located on the banks of the Mekong River, focuses on advancing the artistic, cultural and social development of Lao artisans and promoting the beauty of their rich textiles  to other cultures.)

I had woven warp ikat before but never weft. So the idea of learning this technique under the tutelage of master ikat weaver Miss Phet, was a significant draw. But before weaving could even begin, the weft had to be “tied-and-dyed”.

Ikat weft being wound on frame

The first step was to wind the silk on a wooden device designed for ikat wefts–the size of the frame  based on the  width of my warp for weaving  a scarf, about 14 inches wide, and enough weft for 30 inches in length. Next, each section of my soon-to-be pattern was tied off with plastic –the plastic being a resist where dye can’t penetrate.

Miss Phet and my tied weft

Weft tied and ready for dyeing

After that, the silk was released from the frame and placed in a pot with water and alum, a mordant used for natural dyeing of colors. After mordanting, the skein went into the first natural dyebath of teak leaves and bark which yielded a pinkish-grey color.

Naturally dyeing silk ikat weft

Then the plastic resist was removed and the deep rusty-red dye of the Sappan tree bark was brushed into the silk, soaking in the color. Then the hurry-up and wait until the skein dried in the sun.

Now the weaving could commence. Plain weave with a solid color. I could do that, although I had to adjust to using a playhouse-sized loom with an overhead beater. Miss Phet quickly took over, showing me how the ikat pattern was achieved with the gentle shifting of weft to get two almost vertical bars of colors. I began and within a few shots of weft, I got thrown off.

Weaving ikat on the loom

I couldn’t get the hang of evenly beating  the silk, and the lovely stripes were starting to zig and zag. My teacher gently nudged me off the bench, would weave for a bit, hand the shuttle back to me, and I’d begin again. This went on for hours. Fortunately lunch time arrived and, miraculously, when I came back to the loom, many inches were woven. I did finally get the hang of it all. It took a while though and the scarf was finished mid-afternoon. Miss Phet quickly twisted the fringe, faster than any finishing I have ever seen.

My-two-weavingsW1.jpg

My scarf was completed and I draped it on the bamboo ladder in my guest room, humbled, but no longer thwarted.

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