LEOMINSTER — A Place to Weave, located in the plaza on Arlington Street on the Fitchburg line, is an artistic joy that provides anyone the opportunity to learn how to weave like a true professional.
Participants can step into New Lanark’s rich industrial past while learning practical weaving skills.
Celebración Artística de las Américas artist-in-residence Samantha Vo invites the community to become part of her latest piece.
Weaver Chris Brashear irons a newly woven dish towel in Nantucket Looms' second-floor studio. Edgar B. Herwick III is the guy behind GBH’s Curiosity Desk, where he answers your questions and explores ...
Over the past 50 years, a Marshfield barn located two dirt roads off Route 2 has quietly served as the entire country’s hub for a unique weaving practice that dates back over a thousand years. Despite ...
Today, we embarked on a fun and creative adventure by making our very own cardboard looms for weaving. We showed you how to transform simple cardboard boxes into weaving masterpieces. With a little ...
Suspended from the center of Eastern Washington University’s circular Gallery of Art is a work called “Golden Line.” Its 35-foot-long dangling fabric strands are suffused with pinks, purples, oranges ...