WeavePoint's current version has thread thickness and yarn information. I posted some photos of this honeycomb on my Facebook page in a Weaving folder.īut I do have WeavePoint, and after proving that I could make PCW do this, I used WeavePoint for the rest of my honeycomb drafts. I use this technique or variations of it fairly often as it allows me to "draw" a design line at a large scale. Then I added to the last one, selected that, and made it move the other direction (decreasing by some number) for a while, etc. I advanced that sequence by some number greater than 1, to get a progression of points. I had a sequence of outliner threads for the honeycomb that made a point design, longer on one leg than the other. Tien, the method I used isn't restricted to advancing twills by any means, but for longish drafts it is restricted to sequences that can be generated using software tools. Submitted by tien (not verified) on Sat, - 03:43 I needed 2:8 for my honeycomb pieces, but the outliner threads had an easy design and I could create the design with spaces using PCW tools. I used transparent paste to place the pulling threads into the blank parts of the liftplan. I think I opened up a blank pick every 8 or as needed, then created one for the remaining picks. Will see if I can find it on my computer again, but I have tons to do in the next 24 hours. I requested more options from PCW and they want to do this in a future version I did find a way to do it in PCW but it wasn't straight-forward. ![]() WeavePoint has 1 to N which is from 1 to 99. WeaveIt offers interleave ratios of a to b where both a and b can be integers from 1 to 20. That person wanted to weave 1 or 2 picks of pulling thread and then 8 picks of ground cloth, I think. Tien, this same question came up on WeaveTech some months ago.
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