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To Weave – The Swedish Way: New Techniques and Modern Projects
Authors: Arianna Funk and Miriam Parkman
This book has a really modern aesthetic, the authors wanted to get away from the gentle, therapeutic, ultra-feminine side of weaving, and show a different way of approaching the craft. Welcoming everyone to weaving and to show that there are plenty of different ways of weaving, everyone should do it just the way they feel you don’t have to have perfect selvages or weave the same stuff everyone else weaves unless you want to! But those books already exist, and we think more people will weave if they feel like there’s no one “best” way to do it, and that you don’t have to be an expert from day one. From design concept to choice of materials, draft and tie-up to completed weave, understand the ins and outs of modern handweaving, guided by experts in the craft. Arianna Funk and Miriam Parkman are professional weavers, textile artists, and teachers, and with the help of sketching prompts to spark creativity and sample weaving drafts, they explore the process of developing a weave from beginning to endwhether you want a sturdy, utilitarian textile or a decorative hanging for the wall, or anything in betweenand give all weavers the tools and the confidence to weavetheirway.
Born and raised in Mystic, Connecticut,Arianna Funkmoved to Sweden right after earning her Master’s in Visual Culture at NYU in 2011. She lives in Stockholm with her sons, Axel and Bror, and her partner Erik. When not weaving, she can be found cycling around the city, sailing their wooden boat, and busy experimenting in the kitchen. She’s a small business owner, with a focus on handwoven goods and writing weaving drafts and she also designs patterns for Gist Yarn and Vvmagasinet, the Scandinavian Weaving Magazine.
Miriam Parkmanis originally from a small town in Northern Sweden but nowadays is based in Stockholm. She studied weaving and needlework at Handarbetets Vnner, Friends of Handicraft School 2013-2016. And after graduating spent three months as a design intern at MZ Fairtrade in Oaxaca, Mexico. She runs her company as a freelance textile artist, handweaver, designer, author, content creator, and (sometimes) a vintage stylist. As a textile designer and handweaver, she sees the warp as her paper and the weft as her brush and paint.