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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication -- Solution

You are beginning to weave and don't understand the terminology. Using the vocabulary above, you rewrite the instructions so that anyone could understand them.

Instructions

Wind a warp -- the set of yarns placed lengthwise in the loom. These yarns will be crossed by and interlaced with the weft -- the filling in the weave.

The warp has 134 ends or pieces of yarn, each 4.5 yards long, which will make six mats. Sley, or pull the warp ends through the dents of the reed in accordance with a given plan. The dents are the depressions on the reed. The reed is a series of parallel strips of wires in a loom that force the weft up to the web and separate the threads of the warp. For this pattern, use one end per dent, in a 10-dent reed.

Thread the loom, the actual weaving apparatus, and begin to follow the draft (another name for the pattern) with the weft. You will notice that the draft reads from left to right.

Weave each mat for 17 inches, following the draft. Leave one inch for fringe at the end.

Cut the mats apart, and machine wash and dry. Do not iron.