The Way I Work My Weave Pt. I 21st of Winter 521 AV This morning, Naadiya had woken up with the sun. Early as it was, she laid in bed for an extra few seconds before rolling over and walking over to the shutters. By now, Naadiya had learned to keep the windows closed at night unless she wanted an uninvited friend popping by. Opening them with sleep stiffened fingers, she breathed in the gush of fresh air that flooded the room. Cool, not too damp, and scented with rain. Naadiya could sense the smell of wet soil, freshly tilled by the winter shower she must have just missed. It was invigorating and after she drank two glasses of water and relieved herself in the bathroom, Naadiya went over to her work bag to look through and see what she had to work with that day. Without having had any specific project from Dawn, Naadiya had just chosen several colors all in the same light weight isuas yarns. Her hands now glided to a few skeins and, sitting on the bed, she began to unravel the first skein. She gave a couple of smacks until one of the yarn's loose ends revealed itself at the center. Naadiya pulled on it, unraveling some length before she began to roll up the end into a ball. Naadiya had been taught that yarn was most easily handled when rolled into a ball. It was easier to pull on and tangled less frequently, though could be problematic if living in a house with felines. This house had no felines as of yet so Naadiya rolled and rolled. She had done a several skeins and now had eight balls of yarn in what she now realized was a variety of blues, two in each hue.They were not random blues, but rather, a gradient, with each ball being slightly lighter in tone than the previous one. Naadiya took the few steps over to her loom and started setting up the darkest yarn. The loom’s warp yarns had already been set up the previous night. She’d decided early on to leave the loom ready to be worked on, as soon as she’d taken the last project off. It was a practice that she had found saved her more time than expected, as now she generally started to weave much earlier in the day. With her shuttle ready and her foot on the peddle, Naadiya sat on her little stool and got to weaving. She was working on a narrow piece, good to be used as a runner on a table or floor if kept whole or if cut, maybe towels in a kitchen or as decorative napkins or even place mats. After a few inches of the darkest yarn, Naadiya switched over the one tone lighter and went on for the same length before switching again, and again. When she was reaching the last stripe, Naadiya decided it was missing something and went back to her bag. Finding a pale cream tone, she quickly unravelled and rerolled the yarn before rethreading her shuttle. The last stripe was for the sand. Watery blue went from dark at the ocean’s depths to the lighter tones as the water neared the shore.
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