View allAll Photos Tagged Weave
Little saori weavings, to become napkin rings. Done on my rigid heddle loom. Each 5cm x 16.5cm. Blogged at www.lovefibre.com/2010/06/16/the-last-lap-changing-direct...
The weaving I did. I did the row of circles at the top. The ones that are actually round. Yeah, I rule--this is the third time I've ever done weaving. :P
I was shooting some video for Rosewood Farm for an upcoming documentary. The Dexter cattle were being herded from Seavy Carr to Town's Ings, the footage was to capture this move. I managed to take a couple of shots this being one. The herd look fantastic as it weaved between the long grasses in their new location.
Gimp Tutorial
I used Gimp to create numerous gradients. I then created four grid like images using the G'MIC plugin (Arrays and Frames). Finally I used flickr toys to create the mosaic on the four grid images.
The original model is very nice but it gets thick and difficult to work on in some places, so I decided to modify it. Instead of using the reference "point to center" I used "middle of the side to center" then I did that weaving made popular by Tomoko Fuse and more recently by Peter Keller and I got this.
Folded from a square of 30 cm on the side of some gift wrapping paper.
In this picture, a Marma tribal woman weaving traditional clothes in her backyard.
Lens: EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM
Camera: Canon EOS 5D
Location: Marma Tribal Village, Ali Kodom, Bandarbans, Bangladesh
All contents herein are copyrighted © by Shabbir Ferdous Photography
Except where otherwise noted. Unauthorized reproduction is prohibited.
In a shack in Madanpura, Benaras, lit by the sunlight pouring through a single window & an incandescent bulb over his head, a man bends over his wooden hand loom, weaving a shimmering silk sari with red, turquoise, and gold threads.
The beautiful six-meter-long garment will take 10 days to complete and will fetch the weaver, Masood, 1600 rupees (approximately $35). He is not only a weaver but also with his friends & co-workers sell the saris they make.
Benaras or Varanasi has long been famed for its silk saris. In India, hand-woven saris are to this ancient city what tea is to Darjeeling or papier mache ornaments to Kashmir.
Praised in ancient religious texts, Varanasi's silks were particularly celebrated by the Mughals in the 16th and 17th centuries. So loyal was the Mughal courts' patronage of the hand-loom craft that many weavers converted to Islam. Today, 90 percent of Varanasi's weavers are Muslim. Even in the 21st century, Varanasi's woven silk saris and fabrics remain the finest and most elaborate loom-patterned textiles in the Indian weaving tradition.
But diminishing demand for handwoven saris coupled with competition from power looms – which belt out several garments a day – in other parts of India as well as China have left the 300,000 hand loom weavers of Varanasi, a city in northern India, wretchedly poor.
You can weave them in different ways.... Over-under, over-over-over.... sideways.... in different numbers.... you can weave the small pieces too!
This woven cloth comes from San Juan Sacatepequez, a Maya town near Guatemala City. It looks like this was meant to be half of a huipil.
Girl weaving a cube. She also made a sphere with a bird on a stick out of it. Really cool and she is fast.
LOL, I know that grass doesn't relect, but someone asked me if this (reflection)was possible in PS. A quick job, but I guess it is.
Jacquard weaves, produced on a special loom, are characterized by complex woven-in designs, often with large design repeats or tapestry effects. Fabrics made by this method include brocade, damask, and brocatelle. Dobby weaves, requiring a special loom attachment, have small, geometric, textured, frequently repeated woven-in…
www.britannica.com/technology/Jacquard-weave
DSC05846
A quick look at this patio chair as I was scurrying over to Wally's American Pub and Restaurant in Phoenix - and I knew I wanted this image. It's now my new desktop image for my huge Mac monitor and it sure does make a soft and homey look to fit the monitor into my living room filled with art, collectibles, natural items and clutter.
This is a weaving that one of my girls did a few years ago....they were 7/8 at the time...and I love the way they had no anticipation about what colours to use, or how the materials would look together...children have this freedom of expression and I think it's wonderful!
Namibia Weave - Green and yellow basket with accents of purple, beige and blue for textural interest. Seen at a vendor booth of the Tucson Rock and Gem Show 2013.
"We all have our own life to pursue, our own kind of dream to be weaving, and we all have the power to make wishes come true, as long as we keep believing."
Louisa May Alcott
...portrait of a sari weaver, in a small family business in Maheshwar, Madhya Padesh, in Central India.
(© Handheld Films 2014)
Captured this one weaving its web, destructed by the overnight rain. It was really amazing. To view more of this spider weaving in Full HD please visit my blog @ www.photopaintblog.com/2012/07/engineer-spider.html
Bas-relief wall plaque by Cork sculptor Seamus Murphy.
Mounted over the main entrance to the former Seafield Textile factory in Youghal..
www.google.com/search?q=seafield+textiles+youghal&oq=...
www.google.com/search?gs_ssp=eJzj4tTP1TdIt8gtyzBg9OItTk3M...
Weave a dream and I'll take you there
I'll meet you there
Where the grass is green
Where theres no one to be seen
I'll meet you there.
So this wasnt what i intended AT ALL!
Me and my good bud Joel started off at an abandoned building which we couldnt go in to because of a demolition team.... So instead off to the woods where everything is blossoming
I hope you like it all :)