Saturday, April 25, 2009

Field Basket



Please meet my field basket! Take this basket to the field, the orchard, or your garden and load it with your harvest. The side handles of this sturdy basket make it easy to carry large heavy loads and convenient for two to share the load. It measures 17 inches in diameter and 9 inches high. The base cross is made of 15 willow sticks of 14 inches. A 4-foot willow rod was inserted next to each of the 30 spokes, and 30 bye stakes were inserted next to each spoke for the top half. The chased paired weaving of the base was made with about 8 sets of 4 weavers of willow and red dogwood. The sides are woven with 3 rows of 12 strong willow whalers (thanks to Mary Ann for the bright spring green willows), and two bands of French randing (30 rods each, one inserted between each stake), the bottom one with cotoneaster and the top one with an unidentified shrub. This was my fourth basket and I am eager to fill it with the produce of my garden!



Monday, April 13, 2009

Flower Basket



This flower or herb gathering basket offers a long flat surface so that long stems can lie flat and hang over the edge without being bent. It is essentially woven as a flat disk with the sides bent up and held into shape by the handle. My creation is 24 inches long, 17 inches wide and 22 inches high. That is 62 by 44 by 55 centimeters. The range of colors (yes they are all natural bark colors, untreated) offers a sample of the various shrubs and trees of my backyard that I pruned just before the snow completely melted, plus a few willows from the neighborhood. I dedicated two intensive days for the weaving, after spending countless hours pruning appropriate rods, sorting them and selecting the ones to use for each step of the weaving, and shaping a 4-foot choke cherry sucker (from my friend Judy) into a handle. The base cross is made of 9 willow sticks of 12 inches, which creates 18 spokes. Each base spoke is then extended with 2 3-foot long stakes of red dogwood, inserted on either side of the base spoke, and an 8-inch long bye stake in the middle, except for the bye stakes on either side which were 14 inches long and were eventually replaced by the handle. Most of the weaving was done with two pairs of weavers chasing each other, amounting to 20 sets of 4 rods varying from fine and pliable to thicker and stronger, including willows, cotoneaster, red and green dogwood, suckers of choke cherry and aspen, and yet unidentified shrubs. Two sets of 12 contrasting and strong spindle rods were used for the transition whaling, where the base sticks meet the stakes, and just under the braided border. This was my third basket and my enthusiasm for basket weaving is flowering!