Programs

2025 – 2026 Program Schedule

Program schedule is subject to change

MonthProgram
September 18, 2025 (7-9pm)Digital textiles with Jaya Griscom
OctoberTapestry with Alex Friedman
NovemberColor Confidence with Sarah Jackson
DecemberHoliday Party + Travelogues
January 2026Cotton – A Storied Crop Touching Southern Lives, Farms, Mills and Economies with Steve Brown
FebruaryDeflected double weave with Natalie Drummond
MarchRep weave and custom fabric with Kelly Marshall
AprilShift Ikat with Gail Blackmarr
MayTBD
JuneCNCH Show & Tell, Stash Sale
JulyInformal Summer Program
AugustInformal Summer Program

Black Sheep Handweavers Guild Meeting In-Person Sept 18, 2025, 7-9 pm

We will be hosting the fiber artist Jaya Griscom for an informative talk on her textile art and journey. Join us for a lovely presentation. Jaya Griscom is an abstract figurative textile artist. She learned to weave as a young child and fell in love with the tactile experience of working with fiber, launching a life-long obsession that she’s nurtured through a traditional fine art education and professional practice. Jaya is currently a long-term artist in residence through the City of Palo Alto’s Cubberley Artist Studio Project and a visiting artist at Stanford Art Institute. Her recent work explores the human form and the sense of touch through digital jacquard weaving, using photographic imagery and 3D scans of the figure. Jaya will present on her artwork, process, and how she drafts her pieces for the TC2 loom.

If you would like to also join some members for dinner, beforehand, Lizzy will let you know the details. We also need help with refreshments, sweet or savory. Tea will be available. Please label your food item.

Looking forward to seeing you in person at the Redwood City Senior Center, 1455 Madison Ave., Redwood City, CA 94061.

Show and Tell July 2025

“Guardian” by Kathleen Dickey

Tapestry of person rowing boat

Wool & cotton tapestry 11” X 17”
Shown at Madrone Arts in Pescadero

Runner by Stefanie Selck

Photo of the completed runner

Some detail from Stefanie: “This is a runner with a white cotton warp and a bunch of recycled Sari silk cords I got on Etsy in the weft. It is quite colorful and was fun to weave. This is a 20S Lampas weave with random patterns I created on the go. 

Black Sheep Handweavers Guild Meeting In-Person June 19th, 2025, 7-9 pm

** New Location ! **

Black Sheep Handweavers Guild Meeting In-Person                                                                    June 19th, 2025, 7-9 pm

Please note the new location for this meeting:                                                                                 Center for Creativity, the former Sequoia Hotel, at the corner of Broadway and Main Street.                                                                                                                                                                         The address is 800 Main Street, Redwood City

CNCH share out will be just one part of our June get together.

Please bring your CNCH projects to share with others and tell us the story about your experience there. If there are others with show and tell please plan to share too.

In addition to our CNCH shares, the Stash Sale, historically  associated with our June meeting, will happen again this year! Please bring your wonderful castaways – yarn, equipment, books, whatever – that’s weaving/spinning/textile related – to
the meeting and place them in the designated spot at the beginning of the evening.

Please mark your items with your NAME and the price. (Blue tape is great for this!). Voluntarily, ten percent of the take will go to the Guild. (We use this money to sponsor conference scholarships and/or to make donations to textile-related organizations.)

Questions? Contact Betsy Blosser (bblosser@sfsu.edu).

NB: Please be prepared to take back home any treasures that don’t sell that evening.
Also included in the June meeting is a vote for our next year’s Board.

We also will need help with treats, either sweet or savory. Please bring something to
share and have it labeled with its ingredients. Thanks.

The program will be at 7pm at Center for Creativity (800 Main Street, Redwood City). Please wear a mask if you have any cold- or flu-like symptoms, even if you’re fairly sure it’s only seasonal allergies.

If you’d like to join us for dinner before the program, please contact Lizzy Ten-Hove
(emtenhove@gmail.com)

Show and Tell June 2025

Show and Tell June 2025

Gudrun P. – Notes from CNCH:

CNCH 2025 Kumihimo Workshop with Michael Hattori:
The Missing Link – Linked Structures on the Marudai

Mitake is a type of flat kumihimo braid. It can be made with 16, 24 or32 tama.


Regular Mitake braided in preparation for the workshop:
– 2 braids with 16 tama,  one patterns each.
– 1 braid with 32 tama with pattern variation.

Linked Mitake Silk Braid with 32 tama.
The linking technique gives you the possibility to braid many different patterns. In this picture you see “Center linked mitake”, “Side linked mitake”, “Bokashi Fade In/Out”, “Ito Take – Bamboo”. Fun, fun, fun and it is even better with more colors

Black Sheep Handweavers Guild Meeting In-Person May 15,2025

Black Sheep Handweavers Guild Meeting In-Person May 15, 2025

Round Robin Demo and Activity Event hosted by guild members 7-9 pm at the Senior Center in Redwood City! Join us for an informal learning and sharing experience where fellow guild members will be offering you the chance to try something new. We have the following members sharing and planning their activity:


• Gail Blackmarr will be doing branch weaving using branches and yarn to create a decorative wall hanging
• John Horigan will be weaving some small pouches                                                                                  • Mark Lentczner will be demonstrating kumihimo braiding using a marudai, the
traditional Japanese tool for kumihimo braiding with his group.
• Lyn Curry will be doing macrame with her group
• Spinners, Sharolene Brunston, Monique Hodgkinson and Carol Lewis will be sharing
their spinning techniques with participants

You can rotate to any of these activities and do just one or a few-you choose
Please plan on joining us on Thursday, May 15th. See you then.
The program will be at 7pm at Veterans Memorial Senior Center (1455 Madison Ave, Redwood City).

Please wear a mask if you have any cold- or flu-like symptoms, even if you’re fairly sure it’s
only seasonal allergies.

If you’d like to join us for dinner before the program, please contact Lizzy Ten-Hove
(emtenhove@gmail.com)

The Lopez Island Community Tapestry Project

Weaving a Community: The Lopez Library Tapestry Project
By Barbie Paulsen

The Setting
Lopez Island, where I moved 5 years ago, is accessed through a ferry terminal in Anacortes,
about an hour and a half north of Seattle. Lopez has about 3,000 year-round residents. It’s a friendly place where people wave to oncoming cars on the road. The community feeling is strong.
At the heart of this project sits the Lopez Island Library. They understand their place as a
gathering, educational and connecting space for the island residents. They have a library
employee with the title of Community Alchemist, and she does exactly that: mix people together to make transformational things happen. Through her, I began teaching drop-in weaving sessions every Wednesday afternoon. This led to an Artist in Residence (AIR) stint through the library, which led to this tapestry.

How the Tapestry Project Started
My friend Julia and I taught two workshops for the library’s AIR program. I was the leader for our tapestry workshop where a dozen Lopezians learned the basics of weaving on block looms. We wove on scraps of 1 x 4 wood, sanded and with finishing nails lining each end. I encouraged them to try a couple of two color techniques. In the process, I picked up on new skills. I had only taken a one-day tapestry workshop through CNCH and had taught countless kids how to weave on a block loom. I was learning along with my new adult students.
To give these students more experience and to involve the general population of the island, I set out to make a community tapestry. It was a bit insane to set out on this ambitious project having never woven a tapestry larger than 4”x6” but that didn’t slow me down.

Setting Up for Tapestry Weaving
The materials to get started came easily. My “partner in twine” had a tapestry loom she wasn’t using. She hadn’t woven on it herself, so I followed the manufacturer’s YouTube tutorial on warping. I had a reference book to fall back on. The carpet warp was given to me by a weaving friend who was downsizing. We were off to a good start. I made a cartoon of sorts by placing a black and white photocopy of the library image behind the warp strings. I had modified the image in photoshop so that the library walls would be vertical and easier to weave.

Learning to Dye Wool
I wanted far more colors than any yarn line ever carries, so I knew I’d be dying my own. I chose Collingwood Rug Yarn from WEBS. This yarn was out of stock in “Natural” for weeks, so I had to get started using Dune as my base color. This was another happy advantage that added a warmth to the image. When “natural” finally became available, I used it to dye the clear colors of the roof and sky.

I chose Jacquard Acid Dyes from Dharma Trading Company. In addition to being well reviewed for fastness, they were reported to have the most exhausted dye baths. I didn’t want to dump synthetic dyes into my septic tanks and in November, I didn’t want to be tromping outside to dump them into my thistle patch. I selected a range of about a dozen colors. Looking back, I could have made do with less than half that many. I used all the ones I bought, some more than others.
For the dye process, I wound off 25 gram skeins for ease in calculations and because that
makes a nice size ball. These were scoured and spun out in my dye supply salad spinner. I set up my stock pot with the 5 wide mouth mason jars that it would hold. I measured the dye into each jar, added a splash of boiling water from the kettle, then diluted until the jar was about half full. Each damp, scoured skein went into its own dye jar, with a skewer labeled with its color. The skewers came in handy for poking the fiber into the dye bath.

Multiple colors in one pot

Exhausted dye baths

Dye Calculations
Most dye recipes assume a large amount of fiber. Reducing the recipe for 25 gram skeins gave me quantities I couldn’t measure with my scale. A bit of trial and discovery taught me that a bit of dye the size of a rice grain, scooped with a ⅛ t measuring spoon, would saturate the color. If I wanted to mix colors, I would use half a rice grain of each. Or I would dissolve half a rice grain worth of dye in a tablespoon of water and then drip that into a dye jar of another color until I got the overtone I needed. I used this to add golden hues to some of the greens. I learned to trust my eyes.
After simmering the dye jars in a water bath just below 200F, I added citric acid powder which drove the last of the dye out of solution and into the fiber. The dye baths in the jars were completely clear after the fiber was removed.

Helping a new weaver in the library

Weaving a Community
Participation in the tapestry has been heartwarming. In the end, we had 74 community members and visitors weave on the tapestry. Very few people have declined to weave when invited. Some ask for guidance and reassurance. Some grasp the basics of alternating over and under and how to watch tension at the turn around point and when making a bubble before beating down.
Some weave a single pass of a couple of inches, others sit for many minutes and weave a bush or a section of the roof. None of them are experienced tapestry weavers, but then neither am I. We are learning together. I fill in the tricky corners and set up multiple areas for weaving so that people can make a choice of what they want to work on. I’m there as a safety net, mostly to keep people from pulling the weft too tight. People tug it as if it were a lifeline. We have conversations about fear and trust and risk and letting go of perfection. We laugh and we bond.
The results have an amateurish feel, but that’s because that’s what they are. It is recognizably the library building, and also recognizable as fantasy. About ⅔ of the way to completion, the library staff who had been giving me unconditional encouragement all along began to believe in the project enough to speculate about where in the library it might hang when finished. That’s up to them. It doesn’t even matter if it hangs where it risks fading. We all fade over time. The point has been the process, the building together of a thing. It’s a reminder that big results can be achieved with small steps by many people working together.                                                                                                                                                Let’s all remember that.

Presenting the finished tapestry to the head of the Lopez Island Library                      

The Finished Product 

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

Show and Tell April 2025

Donna D – Baby Blankets in Swedish Lace

In our weave structures group our most recent structure was Swedish lace.                                   I did a set of 4 baby blankets with the same threading, but each a slightly different lace pattern.                                                                                                                                                                   They are 10/2 cotton white warp with 10/2 cotton either pale blue or pale pink weft.       SETT is 24.

***

Lizzie T – Summer and Winter Towels

Here’s some photos of my latest finished project!                                                                                   It’s a set of summer and winter towels (and, in a very bad photo, potholders!) inspired by a class I took with Sarah Jackson at last year’s CNCH.                                                                        When you use the same size thread for both pattern and tabby weft, the colors blend together much more thoroughly, giving a really neat spectrum effect.                                                I’ve included one in-progress photo with Cordelia (my cat) so you can see the colors of the warp—the weft dramatically changes how it looks.

                                        

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Gail B – Purse and Pouch

Gail B. created a lovely purse and a small pouch from her weavings. 

                      

                                           

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Ulla De L. – Towels on a Glimakra loom

I have been spending two months in Sweden where I have an 8 shaft, 36”
Glimåkra Ideal. Two years ago, I was given the stash from a cousin’s mother-in-law. Lots for
16/2 cotton and cottolin. I had many years ago woven a set of kitchen towels out of cottolin that I really like to use and have stood up very well. So, the choice was easy. The old towels were set at 30epi, very tight for the yarn, but I decided to keep the sett and made two 5-meter warps.

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Ange M. – Towels

Bahira: Thursday, April 17th at 7 pm in person!

Bahira: Thursday, April 17th at 7 pm in person!

As Spring returns to the Bay Area, we return to in person programming! Our
speaker for April will be Bahira, a local textile artist whose work can often be
seen at FabMo in Sunnyvale. Inspired by an international upbringing—
her parents were American expats moving around the Middle East—and a first
career in ethnic fusion dance, Bahira now crafts one-of-a-kind dolls in
recycled fabrics, drawing on worldwide traditions from Japanese Shinto to Hopi Kachina and everywhere in between.
The program will be at 7pm at Veterans Memorial Senior Center (1455 Madison Ave, Redwood City). Please wear a mask if you have any cold- or flu-like symptoms, even if you’re fairly sure it’s only seasonal allergies.
If you’d like to join the speaker for dinner before the program, please contact Lizzy Ten-Hove (emtenhove@gmail.com)