Pixel Loom Tutorials
Pixel Loom Tutorials
Sue Farley
pixeLoom Tutorials
Editing Drafts
The Line Tool ................................................................................. 1
Advancing Lines............................................................................. 3
Color Tools and the Color Palette.................................................. 4
Copy, Paste, Move, Repeat ........................................................... 5
Profile Drafts and Block Substitution ............................................. 7
Fabric Analysis............................................................................... 10
Designing in the Tieup ................................................................... 11
Thick and Thin Threads ................................................................. 13
Picking Colors out of a Graphic Image .......................................... 15
Important Functions
Draft Browser ................................................................................. 17
Project Planner............................................................................... 17
Printing ........................................................................................... 18
Adding Labels ................................................................................ 19
Exporting Graphics ........................................................................ 19
Block Substitution
Block Substitution........................................................................... 20
Half-Unit Structures........................................................................ 22
Straightening Things Out ............................................................... 24
Turning Drafts ................................................................................ 26
Rep Weave .................................................................................... 27
Extracting a Design ........................................................................ 29
Create Your Own Weave Structure ............................................... 30
Double Layers
Double Width with One Shuttle ...................................................... 32
Double Width with Two Shuttles .................................................... 33
Double Width with Two Shuttles, in Three Pick Sequence............ 34
Interchanging Layers ..................................................................... 35
Plain and Basket Weave Blocks .................................................... 37
Four Color Double Weave ............................................................. 38
Warp / Weft Faced Designs
A Warp Faced Design .................................................................... 40
Weft Faced with Three Colors ....................................................... 42
Boundweave .................................................................................. 44
Network Drafting
Pattern Lines .................................................................................. 45
A Turtle Morphs into a Flea............................................................ 47
The Shaft Rule for Turtles.............................................................. 49
Using the Ribbon Template ........................................................... 51
Overlaying Treadlings .................................................................... 53
Echo Weave................................................................................... 55
Reference Material
Keyboard Shortcuts - Windows...................................................... 57
Keyboard Shortcuts - Mac ............................................................. 58
Where to Use the Editing Tools ..................................................... 59
Editing Drafts
to
Click and then drag all the way across the tieup so
the line hits all the treadles.
Some tips:
Use the Left mouse button for a line with
increasing slope.
Use the Right mouse button for a line with
decreasing slope.
Hold the Shift key down to erase all or part of a
line.
Editing Drafts
Can you also enter these threadings (and as treadlings) using only the line tool?
Editing Drafts
Advancing Lines
Open a new draft and set its Properties
8 shafts and 8 treadles.
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Editing Drafts
Editing Drafts
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Editing Drafts
Editing Drafts
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Editing Drafts
Highlight the middle section of the threading with
the Selection tool . Right-click in the selection
window and click on Flip Vert from the drop-down
menu.
Editing Drafts
Heres another easy way to add borders to a design.
Go back to the profile draft (make it the active
window), and use the Line Tool to draw a couple of
straight lines on the left side of the threading, where
its easy to insert ends.
Threading->Reverse. Add the other border on the
left (just like before). Threading->Reverse again so
its back to the original order.
Use this same procedure for the treadling, adding
picks to the bottom, then Treadling->Reverse,
adding picks to the bottom again and
Treadling->Reverse for the original order.
Editing Drafts
Fabric Analysis
Open a new draft, and set its Properties to
4 shafts and 4 treadles.
Turn on fabric analysis mode by checking
Drawdown->Fabric Analysis.
Use the Pencil in the drawdown to enter this
design. Shafts and treadles are added and combined
as they are needed in this mode.
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Editing Drafts
The Stamp
tool has the same effect as Copy and
Paste. It is greyed out unless something is selected.
Select the lower left quadrant of the tieup (as if to
copy it) and then use the Stamp tool to place copies
of it in the other three quadrants. Press the Escape
key to get rid of the stamp tool when youre done.
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Editing Drafts
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Editing Drafts
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Editing Drafts
To designate the thick threads, use the
Threading->Thickness function. Fill in a single
unit size - now just three squares, and then specify
the sequence. For this draft, we want a repeating
pattern of thin, thick, thin.
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Editing Drafts
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Editing Drafts
Use the Line tool to put in a few straight lines in the
threading and treadling. Then extend the canvas
canvas with Threading->Repeat (10x) and
Treadling->Repeat (5x).
Use the Pencil tool to fill in this tieup. Setting the
Tieup->Notation to Numeric might help. Also,
remember that with the pencil, the right mouse
button erases.
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Important Functions
Draft Browser
The draft browser comes in very handy for locating
drafts saved in your pixeLoom folder**.
File->Browse opens this multi-paned window that
contains a fabric view for the selected file.
Some tips for using the file browser:
Project Planner
One of the most important pages in my project notebook is a printout of the project plan. The Project
Planner
walks you through all the calculations required to determine width in the reed and warp
length, as well as quantities required for a particular warp and weft yarn. Use the View->Project Plan
command to bring up the project data for a draft. Any notes put into the draft under File->Notes will be
printed out at the bottom of this record sheet.
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Important Functions
Printing
Windows version:
When printing out a draft, its a good practice to use the Print Preview
command to display the page
as it will be printed out. On the toolbar for the preview window are controls for adjusting the scale, paper
orientation, etc., before sending it to the printer.
Mac version:
Use the File->Print command or the Printer icon on the toolbar to bring up the Print window, then click
on the disclosure triangle next to the printer selection to reveal a preview of the printout and make
adjustments to the pixeLoom settings for scale, interlacement and color.
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Important Functions
Adding Labels
You can identify sections of the threading and/or
treadling of a draft by adding labels to them.
Highlight a section of the threading with the
Selection
tool, then right-click in the selection
window and choose Label.
Double-click on the label you just added to change
the text or its end points. Why not add one to the
treadling too.
Exporting Graphics
The Copy to Clipboard command allows you to
incorporate graphics from pixeLoom into another
program.
Windows:
Right-click on the file writeup.rtf and select Open
With, then choose either Word, WordPad, or any
text editing program that accepts graphics.
Mac:
Double-click on the writeup.rtf file to open it in
TextEdit or other program that accepts graphics.
Back in pixeLoom, use Edit->Copy to Clipboard
to put a graphic image of the current view on the
clipboard or pasteboard for the system.
Switch back to the text editor and use Edit->Paste
to drop the graphic into the document.
You can also copy just the threading, treadling or
tieup portion of a draft into the document by
opening that view, zooming in or out to get the
desired scale and then copying it as described
above.
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Block Substitution
Block Substitution
Open 4blk-rose-star.wif.
This is a profile draft it shows the background and
pattern areas of the design.
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Block Substitution
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Block Substitution
Half-Unit Structures
Open a new draft and set its Properties
4 shafts and 4 treadles.
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Block Substitution
So, lets try Block Substitution with
huck-blocks-lace instead.
Success! Notice the difference in scale between the
two drafts 95 warp ends vs. 285 ends.
The threading key for the non-sequential (block)
version of huck-lace contains twice as many ends
per block as the sequential (half-unit) version. It
also uses two pattern shafts vs. just one.
Weave structures with sequential- in the filename are often half-unit structures. They require a
sequential threading and/or treadling sequence in the profile draft and may also put constraints on the
tieup.
Refer to Doramay Keasbeys book Designing with Blocks for more information on many of the structures
in pixeLooms Block Substitution folder.
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Block Substitution
Some structures are more optimizable than others. Double-two-tie and warp-rep often result in duplicate
rows and/or columns in the tieup that can be reduced after block substitution.
For tied weaves, always add the tabby picks before optimizing or youll lose essential elements of the draft
in the process.
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Block Substitution
Make the profile the active draft again, and this time
substitute diversified-plain-weave.wif
This structure requires sequential threading blocks
(no repeating blocks) in the profile draft. So the
challenge is to make the profile draft compatible
with it.
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Block Substitution
Turning Drafts
You can always turn a tied-weave draft after
substitution (and after adding tabby picks).
This would turn the design as well, though, if its not
a completely symmetrical one, such as
heart-sinking.
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Block Substitution
Rep Weave
Open a new draft, and set its Properties to
2 shafts and 2 treadles.
Turn on fabric analysis mode by checking
Drawdown->Fabric Analysis.
Use the Pencil in the drawdown to enter this
design. Shafts and treadles are added and combined
as they are needed in this mode.
When youre done, toggle Fabric Analysis mode
back off.
Threading->Reflect
Treadling->Reflect
Change the Properties of the profile draft
to warp-faced with 2 colors this puts all the color
in the warp.
Colorize using the Paint Brush in the drawdown.
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Block Substitution
Challenge:
Turn the warp-faced profile draft and substitute summer-winter-poly2 or taquete-2color. What changes
are needed in the profile draft to get the proper result?
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Block Substitution
Extracting a Design
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Block Substitution
to
BKG
PTN
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Block Substitution
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Double Layers
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Double Layers
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Double Layers
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Double Layers
Interchanging Layers
Another form of double weave is when the two
layers of cloth interchange in accordance with a
design.
This can easily be accomplished with a profile draft
and block substitution.
Open two-blocks.wif
Tools->Block Substitution:
double-weave-pw-blks
The Block Substitution function brings in color as
well as structure.
When the draft is zoomed out, its easier to see
design in the resulting draft. The threads from the
bottom layer do peek through, but looking at the
front and back views side by side can give a good
approximation of the finished cloth. (Make sure
Drawdown->Interlace is checked.)
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Double Layers
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Double Layers
Open tiny-plaid.wif
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Double Layers
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Double Layers
View->Tieup opens the tieup in a separate window.
Zoom in to examine it more closely.
There are four (4x4) quadrants in the tieup for a two
block double weave draft. Each of these 4x4
sections can specify a different color combination.
Directly out of block substitution, our draft only has
two of these flavors, YR, and BG. By plugging in
the other tieup keys, we can get those color blends
into the cloth as well.
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Using the Pencil with the Ctrl key held down, draw
in a treadling for the second color bar on the right
half of the treadling mimicing the first. This
treadling (marked with the plus signs) governs the
color in the second color bar.
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Boundweave
In this example, well create a boundweave design.
Start with a 4 shaft, 4 treadle draft, that has a
Sinking tieup.
Using the Line tool, draw in a point threading.
Next, well make it a weft-faced draft with 4 color
bars - each tied to a particular treadle.
In the Properties
for the draft, set it to
Weft-faced with 4 colors. The Direct correlation
checkbox becomes active when the number of color
bars matches the number of treadles click on it to
set it.
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Network Drafting
Pattern Lines
Open flea-16x48.wif
The threading for this draft contains a pattern line
with the flea shape that Alice Schlein describes in
Network Drafting: An Introduction.
The first step is to scale the pattern line to fit the
size of the initial and the dimensions of the network
youre going to plot it onto. *
Tools->Scale Pattern Line
Size of the Initial:
4 x 4 with a base of 0
(from Weave Structure: twill-3-1LR)
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Network Drafting
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Network Drafting
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Network Drafting
Treadling->Mirror Threading
Use the Line tool to draw in a twill-compatible
tieup, such as this 3/1/1/3 pattern
View->Tieup might come in handy here
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Network Drafting
Open sine-wave.wif
Since this pattern line starts and ends on
approximately the same point, it has a turtle shape.
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Network Drafting
Challenge:
Tangent-16x54 is also a good example for doubleweave structure try scaling to 108 in length, with a
ribbon width of 6 and lots of wrapping after the plot.
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Network Drafting
Open ribbon-16x32
Here, the design is filled into the liftplan, and the
threading is a straight 16.
Were going to dump 3/1 twill into the dark areas of
this design and 1/3 twill into the light areas.
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Network Drafting
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Network Drafting
Overlaying Treadlings
Make ribbon-16x32 the active draft.
Use Tools->Plot onto Network to fill in just the
background of the template with the broken-twill
structure.
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Network Drafting
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Network Drafting
Echo Weave
Open turtle-16x40
Its already been scaled for a 4-end initial on 16
shafts.
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Network Drafting
A thicker weft is used to compensate for the echo in
the threading. We can simulate this in the draft with
the Treadling->Thickness function.
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Reference Material
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Reference Material
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Reference Material
Pencil
Line
Paint brush
Paint bucket
Eyedropper
Selection
Stamp
Move
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