Tien Chiu

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You are here: Home / Archives for weaving birthday

October 20, 2015 by Tien Chiu 2 Comments

Celebrating nine years of weaving!

Today is my weaving birthday! Nine years ago today, I brought home an 8-shaft Baby Wolf, and my weaving journey began. (Blog post here, if you want to dive back into the archives.) What a voyage it’s been!

Lest you think that design talent is inborn, here is one of my first pieces:

One of my first weaving projects
One of my first weaving projects

While it’s pretty hideous (more so in person than in the photo), you can see some of my creative tendencies even in this first piece. First, it’s ambitious. It’s a complicated advancing twill from one of the Handwoven collection booklets, not a natural choice for a beginning weaver. Second, it’s at least somewhat original, in that I changed out the colors. (The original colors worked much better than my choices, but that’s a separate matter.) Third, it contains some of my preferred style elements: gradient colors, bright jewel tones, complex weave structures. It’s interesting to look back on it and realize that my roots are visible, even from the very beginning.

And here, only a year later, is my first attempt at drafting my own weave structures:

Tiger Eye shawl
Tiger Eye shawl – 2007
Closeup of "Tiger Eye"
Closeup of “Tiger Eye”

If I recall correctly, I used the “Heart’s Desire” scarf draft from the book The Best of Weaver’s: Twill Thrills, modifying the top of the heart so the design became an pointy oval rather than a heart. I also did a few other things, but I can’t remember what. Relatively simple modifications, but still quite ambitious for a weaving novice.

Sometime soon after that, a wonderful thing happened: Bonnie Inouye, a brilliant weaver who has been weaving since before I was born, took me under her wing and taught me a ton about drafting, giving me feedback on my drafts as well as teaching me some things directly. Bonnie is incredibly generous with her knowledge; I would not be the weaver I am without her.

In spring 2008, a few months later, something else happened: I won my first prize for weaving! My “Tiger Eye” shawl won second place in “Accessories” at CNCH. This was a total surprise to me. I’d only been weaving for two years, and I’d only entered because someone told me I really should – if only to get feedback from the judges. I considered myself a rank beginner and had no idea that my work could be deemed good enough for a prize. It was my first inkling that I might do well as a weaver.

In late 2009, a bit over a year later, something else interesting happened: I wrote my first article for a weaving magazine. It was for Syne Mitchell’s online magazine WeaveZine, titled “Plain Weave Variations”. (You can read it on the archived WeaveZine site here.) I got the idea while I was visiting Laura Fry (another very generous and knowledgeable weaver who helped me learn to weave). I was studying loom ergonomics, so to simplify everything else, I spent almost the entire time weaving variations of plain weave. I got home excited, wove up several samples, and decided to pitch the concept to WeaveZine. To my surprise, Syne accepted it, and in November 2009, I became a published magazine writer.

Around the same time, I was engaged in another important activity: founding Weavolution, the social networking site for handweavers. At the time, there were no social networking sites for handweavers: Ravelry, the knitting and crochet social network, wasn’t geared up for weaving and had actually asked weavers not to post their projects on the site, because the owners couldn’t build out the functionality for non-knitting/crochet projects fast enough. I felt there should be a social networking site, and being a website development project manager, thought I could pull it together. But I had no interest in administering the site, so it wasn’t until Syne Mitchell introduced me to Claudia Segal that the project was born. Later, Alison Giachetti joined us as the third partner in Weavolution, and together with a team of volunteers, we raised money and founded a social networking site just for weavers.

Shortly after Weavolution launched, another life-changing event happened: I got engaged! and started weaving and sewing a dress suitable for the occasion. The wedding-dress saga is too long to recount here, but let’s just say that my handwoven wedding dress was a hit – not only in the handweaving community, but also in my own eyes. It took a year and 1000+ hours of work to complete the dress and coat, but at the end I had created something I considered a masterpiece. For the first time. I looked at something I had made and realized that I could be a master weaver. (The wedding ensemble went on to win “Best in Show” at CNCH that spring, was featured in Shuttle, Spindle, and Dyepot, and is now part of the permanent collection at the American Textile History Museum.)

close-up of Tien's handwoven wedding coat
close-up of Tien’s handwoven wedding coat
Tien's handwoven wedding dress
Tien’s handwoven wedding dress

Immediately after I finished the wedding dress, I shifted gears: Handwoven magazine had announced a garment contest, and I decided to enter. After a year working on a white dress, I wanted a riot of color, and my Kodachrome jacket was born. I thought it might be one of the winners, but I never dreamed it would make the front cover!

my Kodachrome jacket on the cover of Handwoven!
my Kodachrome jacket on the cover of Handwoven!

Now, as they say, I was cooking with gas. I wrote a series of articles for Handwoven, and published in every issue of Complex Weavers Journal between February 2011 and October 2013. (I wrote three more articles in 2014, too.) And somewhere in there, I got the idea for a book. In December 2011, I started writing a book proposal. It was originally intended as a compilation of my essays on craft, but by March 2012, it had evolved into a book about the creative process in craft. I spent the next two and a half years working on the book proposal, and finally – on September 4, 2014 – Schiffer Publishing sent me a contract.

And that, dear readers, catches us up more or less to the present. Except, of course, for this life-changing event, just a month and a half ago:

Amazing Grace, the TC-2 jacquard loom
Amazing Grace, my TC-2 jacquard loom

I’m still amazed that I have a TC-2 jacquard loom to weave on, and am very much looking forward to the next nine years!

Filed Under: All blog posts, musings, textiles, weaving Tagged With: weaving birthday

October 23, 2012 by Tien Chiu 1 Comment

Reflections on the past year

OK, I wasn’t planning to do anything special for my sixth weaving birthday, but I decided that it’s good to reflect on the past and the future at least once a year, and my weaving birthday seems an appropriate occasion. So here goes:

There was only one memorable event this year, but it was huge: the American Textile History Museum wanted my wedding dress! It’s extremely unusual for someone without considerable artistic stature to get their work into a museum, and I’m honored.

I also finished some largish projects: Autumn Splendor of course (which won “Most Original” at CNCH, and was juried into the Complex Weavers’ “Glamour, Glitter, Glitz” exhibit), and the Celtic Braid Coat, which is slated to be published in one of the weaving periodicals next year.

And I started two new and extremely ambitious projects – Creating Craft (the book on designing original craft pieces) and Phoenix Rising.

Hmm. I guess it’s been a busier year than I thought!

Anyway, on to the reflection part:

I think the biggest thing this year was choosing my creative direction: whether to get into the gallery/museum track or to stick with the craft side (weaving conferences, etc.). I think I’ve decided to stay on the craft side, at least for now – both because that’s where my book’s audience is and because I’m really not ready to enter the gallery market yet. I haven’t yet found my artistic “voice”, especially if I step out of handwoven couture and into more arty stuff. I need to play and experiment with different types of projects than the ones I’ve been doing, and that will likely take a year or two at least. Once I have a better idea of my own voice, I’ll be able to figure out where to sell my work, if I decide to go down that path.

The second biggest thing this year was something that didn’t happen: I didn’t focus on weaving, and thus didn’t expand my weaving horizons substantially. Instead, I dove into pattern drafting for fashion design, and produced my first original garment design, Autumn Splendor. I got some advice from Sharon, but I did pretty much all the design work myself, and learned a lot in the process. But – very little weaving study. About the only thing original about Autumn Splendor, weaving-wise, was the use of knitted blanks and precision dyeing.

What this means to me is that, weaving-wise, I’ve finally got the skills I need to do my work. This is huge. Most of my efforts in the preceding five years were devoted to learning the craft of weaving. I’m still not a master by any means, but I’ve reached the point where I don’t need much hand-holding anymore; I can figure out most things on my own. I can now turn my attention to other disciplines where my skills are much weaker, and spend time developing them as well.

I have no intentions of giving up weaving, of course – but now I find I can do other things, too. Huge!

The final thing is that I’ve realized that winning awards no longer matters that much to me. While it’s fun to get ribbons, I think judging is a little arbitrary in choosing among the many excellent pieces out there. I’ve also won enough of them to have a feeling of been-there-done-that about them. What that means to me is that I’m feeling much more secure about my artistic abilities than I was in the past five years. Also excellent news!

And here are my goals for the next year:

  • Finish the book. This means experimenting extensively with design and construction processes, and creating lots of examples. This will probably have a profound impact on Phoenix Rising, which will likely be the guinea pig for most examples.
  • Finish at least one project from the Phoenix Rising series. This will probably not be a garment – it’s too big an effort to manage on top of the book – but it might be a quilt from handwoven fabrics, or a wall hanging, or something similar. I do intend to begin the garment, but I don’t expect to finish this year.
  • Continue exploring writing about craft with the intent of “getting serious” about my writing – I’m not sure what that means beyond the writing of the book, but I want to think about it in the year to come. I don’t think the book is the end of this – it’s just a beginning.
  • Consider what makes me happy in craft, and how that ties into my other goals. It’s occurred to me (not for the first time) that I’m not really a master of anything, and never will be: instead, I’m an adventurer, a traveler. It’s just not in me to settle into a single craft – instead, I wander between them, “sewing together” the different crafts I’ve traveled through. I rarely want to achieve the same thing twice: having gotten one piece into a museum, I don’t feel the same drive to place a second piece. Instead I want to move on to other things, but what? Ah, that’s the rub.

And that concludes my reflections on the past year, and on the future. Here’s to another year of weaving, writing, and chocolate!

Filed Under: All blog posts, musings, textiles, weaving Tagged With: weaving birthday

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