Here is the first scarf off this M&W warp at about the half way point:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilYpNVJ8HzRN6wMJvPeTcyqnm3BG2en6Axoj35OQR29W_WaYpnCFgCV8TBwng2j2l0SyoDarD893tbU8ZISSY17zgJSsDntmdU6hV3SA3FndZeVQoQAeHhLLPOeoot0Gxv6TR7A4HlSIqO/s320/IMG_4917.JPG)
And here is the end of it. I just finished the hem stitch. I plan to do the second scarf on this warp in all white, but two different thicknesses of bamboo. I'll show you how it turns out.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhnxQBukEHMcFku81f3uceo9RtyGdOfEQwGKrEFHDN9u_4Y6_vSN9cSeO5tSySpWq2G1ez6hVjJlh83lK96DI9G7Ul-j8YrcyFNrmvbv8GKxlEVrMuNb_Dc5AYE2wTK97kEkCc-PJeC2uPM/s320/IMG_4956.JPG)
As a distraction I'm using my little weavette loom to sample a blue and orange satin. I love this little thing because if I have doubts, I can just weave a tiny patch. Plus, having to do it by counting threads rather than lifting shafts forces me to intimately understand my weave structure. And I can take it far more places than I can take my floor loom.
Beautiful work! And isn't bamboo great to work with? (I think so, at least!)
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