What Is It?
Photo from the Oseberg Textile book (Nockert 2006, p. 144). |
I've found LOTS of information online about the woven bands that were found at Oseberg; but very little information about the loom itself - mostly what I've found are people's recreations of the loom in various sizes (which I found very helpful for construction ideas, but not documentable research).
How I Built It
I decided in late January that I wanted to build myself a smallish version of the Oseberg loom as an experiment - just to see if I could do it, and to see how weaving on an actual period loom would be (I normally use an inkle loom, which was invented in I believe the 1700s).
I used only scrap wood I had laying around in my shop for this, because I wanted to get this done on the cheap. The original Oseberg ship burial loom is made of birch; mine is made of pine 1x2" furring strips. Each piece that I had on hand was about 3.5' long, which was the perfect size for this project.
(ignore the table legs, that's a different project) |
My loom is approximately 3' wide and about 18" high. It's a little big for a "tabletop"loom - but I planned to use this on my low coffee table in my living room at home, and it's exactly the right size and height to work with there while sitting on the couch.
The uprights are pegged into the holes in the base with dowels that are glued into the uprights, but can be removed from the base. The crossbar in the middle of the loom is also pegged in place in the same way - glued in the crossbar but not into the sides. The whole thing breaks down into 3 sticks and the base/foot piece for travel and storage.
The base is also made of a 1x2" furring strip, with crossbars attached to the ends to stabilize the loom and stand it up. The crossbars are pegged in place permanently.
How the Heck Do You Warp This Thing??
Honestly, I went into this with zero idea how to warp this loom. I'd seen pictures of recreations of this loom with weaving already on them, but never found any description of how it was accomplished, so I just decided to wing it and see how it worked. After all, this IS an experiment, right?
welcome to my dining room |
Weaving on this loom is…interesting. I had intended to use this loom on my coffee table, sitting next to it, but I have to twist my back so much to weave that it hurts me (I have a bad back). The next thing I tried was putting it on my dining table and standing next to it, which worked great - except that the loom is so lightweight that it walks around while I’m trying to weave, so I had to clamp it to the table top to get it to stay still. Once I did that, though, weaving was super easy, and fast.
Advancing the warp is easy enough: I achieved proper tension by tying the lower warp to the crossbar, so to move the weaving I just untied it, shifted the warp around, and then re-tied it.
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