All Access
| Project Type | Towels |
|---|---|
| Categories | Rigid-Heddle |
| Techniques | Plain Weave, Clasped Weft or Warp, Double Heddle |
| Heddle Width | 12 |
| Author | Anne Merrow |
| Format | Project/Pattern |
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Login“Virga” is the word for rain that never reaches the ground—precipitation that evaporates while falling, leaving streaky traces in the air. The skies during this phenomenon can be gray and stormy or blue with fluffy tendrils that seem to reach for the earth. Anne used three colors of cottolin yarn and a clasped-weft design to suggest the sometimes-stormy, sometimes-lacy virga cloud.
About Anne Merrow: Anne Merrow started weaving to reduce her yarn stash and ended up falling in love with the rigid-heddle loom. She loves to weave towels, because even the samples are useful! She lives in Colorado with two cats who insist on helping her warp.
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