Ask Madelyn HAVE A QUESTION? OUR EDITOR HAS THE ANSWER madelynv@interweave.com
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Dear Madelyn,
When weaving with variegated yarn is it better to use it for the warp or the weft? Which is the best method to showcase the variegations in the yarn?
Thanks,
––Mary Jane Schauer
Hi Mary Jane!
This is a good question, and some of the answer depends on the yarn (especially the way it is colored) and what effect you want.
If it is somewhat irregularly variegated and you use it in both warp and weft in plain weave or lace, say, you'll get a tweedy, speckled overall look. This can be muddy, depending on the colors, or "textured," which can be good.
If you use it in one direction, you'll notice the variegated colors more (pick a dark coordinating solid for the other direction, warp or weft, and that will make the colors stand out). Warp rep or weft rep will show the variegated colors well, though they may still be a bit a-jumble.
For some variegated yarns, the color changes are repeating. That is, you can lay out pieces and line them up so that color changes match. If you figure that out and wind the warp so that happens, your warp will look warp-painted. The same thing could be planned in the weft. If you cross the two, though, the effect will be more or less lost (unless there is a way to make warp and weft color changes coincide!).
If the yarn is very special and you really want the color changes to show and to feature the yarn itself, you can use it as an accent thread: it can be a pattern-weft float in overshot, an occasional warp or weft (see "Showing Off Novelty Yarns," by Robyn Spady, May/June 2008), or a supplementary warp with a contrasting-color ground cloth.
I hope this helps!
––Madelyn