Rebecca Mezoff teaches James Koehler's weft interlock technique for tapestry weaving

Though this video is still relevant, I have made a much better version of it which you can find on my KZread channel here: • The James Koehler Weft... This video is the very first one I ever made. Now I teach thousands of students tapestry weaving online. Visit my website for details at tapestryweaving.com.
Rebecca Mezoff (rebeccamezoff.com/) was a student and apprentice of James Koehler for 6 years before his death. This video describes James' signature weft interlock join used in his art tapestries. Tapestry weaving was James' passion and he was a gifted teacher. Rebecca is passing on some of his knowledge to her students now that James is no longer with us. Read more about tapestry weaving on Rebecca's blog: rebeccamezoff.com/blog. See more about James Koehler here: rebeccamezoff.com/james
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Rebecca Mezoff is a passionate tapestry artist, teacher, and author. You can find more about Rebecca and her online tapestry weaving classes here: rebeccamezoff.com/
Follow Rebecca’s weaving adventures on her blog: rebeccamezoff.com/blog
Weave along with Rebecca on Change the Shed: rebeccamezoff.com/change-the-...
Watch past Change the Shed Live Streams here: • Change the Shed
Enjoy the rest of Rebecca's videos here: / rebeccamezofftapestry
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Find Rebecca’s book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving: rebeccamezoff.com/the-art-of-...
Some of Rebecca’s most recommended weaving resources: rebeccamezoff.com/resources
Join Rebecca for a Live (Virtual) Weaving Workshop: rebeccamezoff.com/live
Start learning tapestry weaving with Introduction to Tapestry Weaving: rebeccamezoff.com/introductio...
Make tiny works of art with Weaving Tapestry on Little Looms: rebeccamezoff.com/weaving-tap...
Go in-depth with Warp and Weft, a 3-part beginner friendly deep-dive into tapestry weaving: rebeccamezoff.com/warp-and-we...
Level up your weaving with Fringeless: Four selvedge warping: rebeccamezoff.com/fringeless/
Learn to dye your own yarns in Dyeing with Acid Wool Dye: rebeccamezoff.com/dyeing-with...
Embrace color with Color Gradation Techniques for Tapestry: rebeccamezoff.com/color-grada...
Adventure into designing for tapestry with Design Solutions for The Artist/Weaver:
Season 1: rebeccamezoff.com/design
Season 2: rebeccamezoff.com/design-solu...
Discover all of Rebecca’s online tapestry weaving classes, and find the class that is right for you: rebeccamezoff.com/online-lear...
Thanks for watching!

Пікірлер: 27

  • @deetudor7152
    @deetudor71523 жыл бұрын

    You're a great teacher! Thank you so much for such clear instructions!

  • @karolinneochoa8035
    @karolinneochoa80358 жыл бұрын

    I like so much the tutorial..i can do this in my loom and i am so happy for this..i want to learn more things with you.. thank you so much!! :)

  • @FarFungPlaces
    @FarFungPlaces8 жыл бұрын

    This was a clear and concise video showing how to do a weft inter-lock tapestry weave; the close-ups were especially helpful in grasping the technique.

  • @tusharpatel298

    @tusharpatel298

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/epiIxdGYm7yulJc.html

  • @erikamills9246
    @erikamills92468 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your respond.

  • @Jennaluvx
    @Jennaluvx10 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video. I'm a beginning weaver, practicing with stripes first. This helps to demonstrate for me the next step I can take in creating a pattern. Thanks Rebecca! :D

  • @tusharpatel298

    @tusharpatel298

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/epiIxdGYm7yulJc.html

  • @JaneanEasley
    @JaneanEasley11 жыл бұрын

    Great video. I have only done Navajo style tapestry weaving. We use the interlock join extensively. There is also a Turned or shared warp join. Your demonstration looks like it blends those techniques together. I'm not sure if you will find those techniques on KZread, but there are some books that describe it well.. In Navajo weaving, it is completely reversible.

  • @nothuman100
    @nothuman10010 жыл бұрын

    How do i stop the sides pulling in?? if i dont pull them in they are too loose, but if i pull them tight they curve in

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    10 жыл бұрын

    Do you mean the sides of the tapestry? That has to do with weft tension and how much weft you put into the tapestry. If you mean in the actual join, you want it pretty tight.

  • @TaraSohrabi
    @TaraSohrabi8 жыл бұрын

    Great video, Where can I find the comb that you are using to press the thread? What is the name of this comb?

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Tara Sohrabi This particular tapestry fork is made by Magpie Woodworks. John isn't making many of them anymore, but another company that is making some similar forks is Threads Thru Time. They have an etsy store here: www.etsy.com/shop/Threadsthrutime

  • @TaraSohrabi

    @TaraSohrabi

    8 жыл бұрын

    Thank you,

  • @MeherBabaMeher
    @MeherBabaMeher10 жыл бұрын

    🌷

  • @annies8075
    @annies80753 жыл бұрын

    I only started weaving last week on a small loom. No idea who James Koehler is, but I've automatically done this to join the different colours that I've been using on the loom. In the 1970s, I did work in the offices of a Lancashire weaving mill, so at times I had to go down into the weaving sheds to get the pick clock readings in order to calculate the weavers wages, and very often saw faults in cloth being mended after the clothlooking process, so maybe I subconsciously stored this technique away in my brain. I therefore think that perhaps the technique does not originate from James Koehler?????

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    3 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely true. This is an interlock that I learned from James who is a renowned tapestry artist. He was my teacher and he died in 2011. This was the very first video I ever made and I've made another one on this channel that is a bit better. This one has had so many views that I can't delete it! This is a form of weft interlock that I'm sure many people have used. I just have never found a specific way to refer to it, so this is my nomenclature.

  • @Heraclitean
    @Heraclitean7 жыл бұрын

    Anyone know what size warp yarn that is?

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    7 жыл бұрын

    12/6 cotton seine twine made by Bockens in Sweden. In the US, Glimakra USA carries it as do quite a few other retailers. It is an excellent warp, unmatched by any other cotton warp I've seen sold in the US (in my humble opinion!) Rebecca

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry
    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry11 жыл бұрын

    Not quite that rough, but I do have trouble giving good fingerprints when necessary... of course fingerprinting needed for employment reasons! :)

  • @maryannsinclair3148
    @maryannsinclair31483 жыл бұрын

    Hi Rebecca, I have been looking for a beater like yours & can’t find it. Can you tell me where to get one? Thank you! Mary Ann from Deer Park WA

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is a beater from Magpie Woodworks. They do great work.

  • @maryannsinclair3148

    @maryannsinclair3148

    3 жыл бұрын

    Rebecca Mezoff THANK YOU!

  • @erikamills9246
    @erikamills92469 жыл бұрын

    It looks like as a simple Navajo weaving technics to me. Check out Barbara and Linda Teller's websites.

  • @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    @RebeccaMezoffTapestry

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Erika Mills It is and it isn't. It is a join particular to the way the warps are raised or lowered as you wrap it. But you're correct that it is a weft interlock moving in the same direction which is what the Navajo would use. All of their weaving moves in the same direction. Contemporary tapestry does not and thus the emphasis on direction and up and down warps.

  • @christierella
    @christierella11 жыл бұрын

    I bet you have the finger tips of a guitar player!