:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The rigid heddle loom does the hardest part automatically. You just decide what you want to make. :INFO Why the Rigid Heddle Is the Right First Loom A rigid heddle loom is a self-contained weaving device with a built-in heddle (the slotted and holed bar that separates and lifts warp threads). It creates two sheds automatically — up and down — which is all you need for plain weave. It warps from front to back in under an hour, sits on a table, and produces actual woven fabric. Looms from 10 to 24 inches wide cover scarves to light yardage. :COUNTER.half 8 to 10 EPI | :COUNTER.half 1.5x the Finished Width :PATH Wind the Warp Use a warping board to wind warp threads to consistent length and count. | :INFO Wind the Warp Calculate your warp length: finished length plus 24 inches of loom waste. Wind warp threads onto a warping board to the correct count for your sett (ends per inch times width in inches). Maintain consistent tension throughout winding. Keep a cross — a figure-eight loop where threads cross — at the start of the warp to preserve thread order. :PATH Dress the Loom Thread warp through the heddle — alternating slots and holes — and tie on. | :INFO Dress the Loom Attach the cross to the front beam with lease sticks. Thread each consecutive warp thread through the heddle alternating: one through a slot, the next through a hole, repeating across. This arrangement allows the heddle to create two separate sheds. Tie the warp to the front apron rod in small, even groups. Beam the warp onto the back beam evenly, then retension. :PATH Weave the First Section Pass the shuttle through each shed and beat gently after each pick. | :INFO Weave the First Section To create the first shed: raise the heddle up. Pass the shuttle through. Lower the heddle past center to create the second shed. Pass the shuttle back. This is one complete pass (two picks). Beat each pick firmly toward the fell line with the heddle. Keep the weft at a slight arc rather than pulling straight across — this prevents draw-in at the edges. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] Rigid heddle loom — 16 to 24 inch width recommended [ ] Worsted weight yarn for a first project [ ] Warping board or peg [ ] Shuttle (boat shuttle or stick shuttle) [ ] Tapestry needle for finishing edges :NOTE Draw-In Is the Most Common Beginner Problem If your weaving narrows significantly from the set width, you are pulling the weft too tight. Leave a generous arc in the weft before beating. Over time this becomes intuitive. A temple (stretcher) device that holds the fabric to the correct width can help while you develop consistent weft tension. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The loom holds the warp. You only decide what goes through it. :LINK https://www.schachtspindle.com/learn-to-weave/ Schacht Spindle Co. — Learn to Weave on a Rigid Heddle Loom