Rebecca Mezoff Blog — Rebecca Mezoff

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The Tapestry Discovery Box evolving community

The Tapestry Discovery Box evolving community

Over the last couple years I’ve been fortunate to find such a connection in Gist Yarn. This small yarn company based in Boston is all about yarn, weaving, and making connections among people. They’re operating principles include supporting diversity and sourcing their raw materials locally.

The Tapestry Discovery Box is a collaboration I’ve been working on with Gist for the last year. The first box went live in January. The boxes include Array tapestry yarn and a new course with a project from me shipped out every quarter. . . .

We’ve had so much fun in the first two boxes. Below are some of the work the participants have been creating.

The first box was about Openings. My example tapestry was of a door and window, but people interpreted the theme in many different ways. The technique we were playing with was weft bundling. I was amazed at the different color effects people got with the very same set of yarns.

A fleece followed me home... wool fumes overwhelmed me

A fleece followed me home... wool fumes overwhelmed me

Last week I took a two-day workshop with Maggie Casey as part of the Estes Park Wool Market. All in all I spent four days up in Estes Park immersed in wool, sheep, yarn, and making. By Sunday afternoon I found myself driving down Big Thompson canyon with a huge smile on my face, wool fumes from the four fleeces in the backseat wafting around me. Even dodging the tourists stopped in the middle of the narrow, winding, road to look at bighorn sheep didn’t penetrate the wool bliss.

I love diving into materials. And wool is a material that can do so much. I didn’t know this until I learned to spin.

Steaming small tapestries: Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving

Steaming small tapestries: Questions from The Art of Tapestry Weaving

What do you do after your tapestry comes off the loom? There are many ways to finish a tapestry, but my favorite thing to do is steam it.

The finishing chapter in my book, The Art of Tapestry Weaving, talks about using steam as the final finishing of a tapestry (see page 265). Recently, students in a couple different online classes have asked me for a video showing how I do this, and so this blog post was born..

Retreating to the mountains for sketch tapestry... with 11 new friends

Retreating to the mountains for sketch tapestry... with 11 new friends

I spent last week at one of my favorite places. I haven’t been to Colorado State University’s Mountain Campus since 2019 due to Covid. It was high time I went back. I do go hiking in this area outside of Fort Collins fairly often and have seen the campus from trails above many times since 2020. It felt great to move back into a cabin and teach in the lodge.

The campus is largely used by environmental and forestry students for summer study. They also have a small conference center where I hold tapestry retreats. The property is at 9,000 feet elevation surrounded by high peaks of the Mummy Range and is just a few miles as the trail goes from the border of Rocky Mountain National Park. I love spending part of each of my teaching day wandering the trails, watching moose, birds, and other creatures in the forest and river, and seeing the stars at night.

This year’s retreat was about sketch tapestry. We wove small tapestries based on things we were either experiencing on campus or some students worked from images of other places they brought along. There was frequent laughter, many discoveries, and a lot of tapestries were woven.