Confluence Skirt
As a professional tailor, I like to make clothes that fit well. For this design, I also wanted to create a pattern that would help weavers who were new to sewing get over their fear of cutting handwoven fabric.
This skirt is woven in narrow, 8-inch, panels and the shaping occurs along the selvedges, with very little cutting required. It’s a technique that creates a flattering skirt, and can be woven on even the narrowest looms.
Confluence (con·flu·ence): joining together, gathering at one point; also, the flowing together of two streams.
Project Notes
This skirt makes great use of narrow yardage. If you don't own a wide loom, you can still weave beautiful garments. And best of all, using selvedges in the seams means you don't have to do any additional seam finishing!
Equipment
Loom with a weaving width of 8 inches or greater.
Note: The skirt shown was woven in an 8-shaft twill, but you could also weave the fabric for this project in plain weave.
Yarn & Materials
- 20/2 silk. The warp was hand-painted in jewel tones, and the weft was burgundy (and dark blue.)
- 1-1/2 inch wide Milliner's tape for the waistband from Nancy's Sewing Basket.
- 10 buttons for the closure. I used 10 vintage buttons from the 1920's and 30's that I found at Beadworld in Seattle.
Sett
24 ends per inch
Weave Structure
An 8-shaft twill. This pattern is 331-4 from A Weaver’s Book of 8-Shaft Patterns edited by Carol Strickler.
Download the draft as a WIF file.

Painting the Warp
I hand-painted two nine-yard warp chains during a summer workshop with Roberta Lowes, using acid dyes. The 20/2 bombyx silk takes color well. I had originally planned the warp chains for scarves, but after a year I had a new plan: use them to weave narrow fabric for a fashionable garment.
Weaving
I set up my table loom with an eight-shaft twill pattern at 30 epi and wove with a 20/2 weft of dark blue silk. Weaving it took a very long time. I was averaging about 12-18 inches per hour. My first warp took more than 20 hours.
After I cut the warp off the loom, I was dissatisfied with the fabric’s drape and width (5-3/4 inches or 14.5 cm). So I threaded the second warp at 24 epi and wove with a 20/2 weft of burgundy silk on a floor loom. Weaving on the floor loom was much faster, and when it was cut off the loom, the fabric had much better drape. As a bonus, the fabric was slightly wider (6-3/8 inches or 16 cm), too. Both fabrics were hand washed, line dried, then lightly steamed flat.
Sewing the Skirt
Originally I planned to make a couture dress, but decided that I would wear a fancy skirt more often.
I measured from my waist to the floor, front, back, and sides. I checked my measurements to the quantity of burgundy weft fabric and realized I would be short a few important panels around the circumference of my hips. (Drafty!)
Luckily the blue-weft fabric coordinated well with the burgundy. I measured again, added a bit little for wiggle room, and then started cutting.
After all nine panels were cut I straight stitched along the raw top and bottom edges to prevent them from unraveling.
I then lay all the panels out parallel to each other and shifted them around until I found a pleasing color sequence.
Then I lightly pinned the panels together (using about 5-6 pins per seam) and had a friend adjust them until the seams fit me perfectly. I gently unpinned the left hip seam so I could get out, and marked its seam allowance.
I did not cut off the excess fabric along the selveges. Instead I adjusted the seam allowance to gradate from zero (just above my knees) to approximately 3/4 inch or 2 cm at my waist. There was some variance, with more seam allowance needed in the back (where I am curvy) and less in front.
I hand stitched the panels together using the burgundy weft yarn, leaving a 6-3/4 inch or 17 cm open along the left hip. (As time passes I may need to let out or take in the seams of the skirt, and I want to make it easy for me to do so.)
I reinforced the waistband with milliner's tape, which is similar to grograine ribbon, but more flexible.
I marked the final waist line, machine stitched along it, trimmed off any excess beyond an inch, applied 1-1/2 inch wide milliners tape along the waist line and flipped it inside (thus covering the raw edge and providing a hidden waist band).
I machine stitched (using a larger stitch setting) "in the ditch" between the panels from the right side of the fabric. I did this to tack down the internal waist band, while also making it possible to remove in case I needed to make an adjustment.
I then marked where the ten vintage buttons should go, machine stitched small button holes along the reinforced edge, and fray checked the button holes before opening them with an X-acto knife (a seam ripper would also work.)

I put the skirt on, marked where the button holes should go, then wiggled out and sewed the buttons on.
I finished the skirt by hand hemming the bottom edge of all the panels.
I then lightly pressed the skirt inside out, turned it right side out, tried it on, and danced a happy jig.

Selah Barling is a professional tailor in Seattle, and has been sewing since she was three. She began weaving 14 years ago, and delights in making handwoven garments that fit and flatter a wide range of people. She is also an avid handspinner and felter.


Comments
Wonderful Skirt!
Selah,
It was nice meeting you this past weekend at CNCH, and getting to see this gorgeous skirt. Fascinating about not cutting the overlapped selvedge edges; I've seen that in older kimono, where the cloth is left full-width and the seam just overlaps.
Ruth Temple Redwood City, CA
Great idea
I love the way you have put this skirt together - very simple and adaptable - great for Saori weaving.
Thanks!
Happy Weaving,
Terri
www.saorisaltspring.com
It was a pleasure
Hello Ruth,
It was a pleasure to meet you. I'm glad you liked the skirt. I was mobbed several times the couple of hours I was wearing it and that added to the fun of the banquet at CNCH.
I like leaving a strong stable edge inside the garment. Too often when the seam allowance is clipped close in a soft fabric it unravels or works loose.
happy jig
I absolutely love this skirt - it makes me feel like dancing too, just looking at it!
Cally
t'katch
Warp length?
This is a great design. I am wondering, though, how long was the warp (or were the warps) for this and how long was the finished fabric?
Warp Lengths
There were three warps with slightly different widths that ended up being 7-8 inches in the reed. They all were about 5 yards long on the warping board but I'm not sure what the shrinkage ratio was (about 10-15%?). Yes there is some left over yardage, perhaps enough for a tank top.
so pretty!
I also sew and weave and it's nice to see someone not afrid to use handwovens for projects that don't finish right off the loom! Thanks for the inspiration.
Car Wash Skirt
I made a skirt similar and called it 'Car Wash Skirt' = think of the strips in the soft car wash. You can see them on my website www.micheleoreilly.com Great fun and easy to make. I lined each strip with hand dyed silk and then sewed together by overlapping thus making them easy to shape and adjust.
Soo Very Unique
What an awsome skirt, this is really a work of art. Who ever gets to wear this is going to draw alot of attention.
Orchid lights
Amazing a wearable work of ART!!!
I am so very amazed with this skirt, and being a skirt person, rather than jeans or shorts, capris etc...
I just love the design, drape and of course, like any little girl (of 42..lol) the "twirl factor" of that skirt!
It truly is a wearable work of art!
You should be the proudest person in the world for coming up with that idea!!!
Beautiful! Stunning!
I'm usually a gabby one, and I'm just about speechless... (=
sewing the weave
I have been hand spinning for 9 years now and while most of my spin ends up being run through the sewing machine or an embroidery needle, this makes me want to get a rigid heddle or table loom to try out. my inkle loom just wouldnt do this justice. thanks!
Hi, I'm Sandra and IT
Hi, I'm Sandra and IT instructor major in web designing. I deeply inlove with your designs, very artistic and a true model of resourcefulness. I can feel the inspiration behind your works that made it so special.
I had no idea what could be
I had no idea what could be done with weaving, I would love to try my hand at something like this. It would make for a great winter project.
Your blog provided us with
Your blog provided us with valuable information to work with. Each & every tips of your post are awesome. Thanks a lot for sharing. Keep blogging.
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After all nine panels were
After all nine panels were cut I straight stitched along the raw top and bottom edges to prevent them from unraveling. Artikelverzeichnisse
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I was really amazed seeing such a colorful skirt ever.
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Hey This is some great thing
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