Archives Banner600


Ann Turner Picture WB200

A Loom and a Simple Weaving Project
By Ann Tuner

 

 

3-Bracelets575

Beginner Level11Once again, we’re starting a project by making a tool: a simple loom. You’ll be surprised at how easy it is to make, and how useful the loom can for other creative projects. The structure of this loom is based on a triangle, and depending on which end you start from, you can use it to achieve surprisingly different results. . For the purposes of this project, the loom I’ll be btn_downloadebookmaking is about 18 or 19” long. However, it can be made much longer to adapt to other uses.

Ann Turner Picture WB200About The Author

I was born in New York, and grew up on the North shore of Long Island.. My first degree, from FIT, is in fashion design. I eventually earned another degree in art education and a third in fine arts, with minors in anthropology, art history, and psychology.

I’ve had the opportunity to travel extensively and have lived many places in the world; settling for about 10 years in a remote Catskill mountain cabin with no utilities or running water. I made sweaters, shawls, clothing, soap, and jewelry to barter for the “extras” we couldn’t afford, such as the midwife who delivered my children. When my youngest was a little over a year old, I took on full-time employment as a counselor in a psychiatric day-treatment program. I led a handcrafts group and provided supportive counseling to deinstitutionalized people.

Since 1997, I have worked as a therapeutic art teacher in a residential facility for court adjudicated boys. I never seem to teach the same project twice, though every year I do teach ceramics and some form of jewelry making – metal work, glass fusing, wirework, beading, copper enamel, and more. My boys (aged 12-18), really enjoy combining macramé and beading! I love teaching and working with these special guys, but in an attempt to make more money, occupy my mind productively, and enjoy more creative gratification, I began designing jewelry on my two-hour commute.

Soon I was spending time combing the internet for suppliers. When I had an inventory of only ten pieces, Backwoods Beadery was born. We sell from our Website and at craft fairs and home parties. My husband John is our Webmaster and takes care of the business end in addition to being a great bead designer. I do the buying, more of the design, and the new product end of things. We both contribute to the newsletter.

 Download a Printable Copy of This Project

Blue Pdf Logoget_adobe_readerPremium Subscribers: Free
(Info on becoming a Premium Subscriber)
Standard Subscribers: $2.99

Page Navigation
BeadBazaar-banner-550
Archives-Table-of-Contents

If you enjoy The BeadBugle.Com newsletter and magazine, there are a few ways to help support us. You can subscribe for $25 per year (find out what this entitles you to), you can purchase beads and beading supplies from BeadBabe.Com, You can purchase the books we review through the links to Amazon.Com and finally you can contribute content to the publication (articles, pictures of you work, projects of your favorite design). Just submit to wjohnson@Beadbugle.com. So even if you can’t afford a subscription, you can help. Thank you for your support. ~ Bill

Google Custom Search

Copyright © BeadBabe Publications - Priceless International, Inc. All Rights Reserved

BeadBugle.com-Logo-small
Page Navigation