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Weft or warp threads
To put the warp threads on the loom (Jaritza)
The warp
From Wikipedia:"In weaving cloth, the warp is the set of lengthwise yarns that are held in tension on a frame or loom."
In weaving cloth, the warp is the set of lengthwise yarns that are held in tension on a frame or loom. The yarn that is inserted over-and-under the warp threads is called the weft, woof, or filler.
They're called the warp - and the weft. The warp is the vertical threads attached to the frame - the weft is the threads drawn through the warp in the process of weaving.
Marta Hoffmann has written: 'The warp-weighted loom'
In weaving, the warp is yarn that is attached to either beam on the loom (length-wise). It's what the weft passes back and forth through.
Weaving is worked on a loom. It is comprised of a series of individual threads (called warp threads) that are kept vertically under tension by the loom. The weaver then places horizontal rows of "weft" threads through the warp to make the cloth. The warp and the weft are always perpendicular to each other. Knitting is worked on a set of two pointed sticks (knitting needles). A single thread is worked in loops to make a row. Subsequent rows are built on the previous row to make the cloth, still using the same single thread.
A water-jet loom is a machine for weaving cloth (loom) which uses a jet of water to insert the weft (crosswise threads) into the warp (lengthwise threads).
Weaving is to produce a cloth by crossing vertical threads (warp) with horizontal threads (weft) on a loom.
Weaving is to produce a cloth by crossing vertical threads (warp) with horizontal threads (weft) on a loom.