Cleaning my vintage Harris loom

Having rescued a loom from the skip (see my previous post) I now want to clean and restore it back to working order. First steps are to clean all of the metalwork and remove any rust; clean, lightly sand and wax the wooden frame; and replace the fabric on the rollers as it is in very bad condition.

The loom is a 16-shaft table top loom. On each of the 16 shafts there are about 120 heddles (made of thin wire)…and on at least 4 of the shafts these heddles are very rusty.

Rusty metalwork

Each shaft is made of four metal bars that are held together with screws. Working on one shaft at a time, I undid the screws at one end of the shaft, removed one of the metal bars and then removed the heddles individually.

Heddles removed from the loom, ready to be cleaned

Using a small container, I added warm water and a little bicarbonate of soda and placed the heddles in the solution allowing them to soak for a few minutes.

Cleaning solution for the metalwork

Taking one heddle at a time, I gently scrubbed it with a scourer, to remove the grime and any rust, and dried it with a paper towel. The wire heddles are quite fragile and bend easily, so I needed to handle them carefully.

Once clean and dry I could slide each one back on to the shaft and screw the metal bar back in place.

Close up detail of heddles on the shaft
Three of the four shafts that I have cleaned so far

I have cleaned four shafts so far and have decided to initially set up the loom as a 4-shaft loom, while I learn how to use it. I’ll clean the remaining 12 shafts later on.

The next job was to replace the fabric on the three rollers. You can see from the image below how worn they are.

The fabric on the rollers is very worn

I removed the old fabric from the rollers and used it as a template for the replacement pieces. I looked through a small stash of old fabric I have and found an old cotton sheet that had a lovely quality.

Using the old fabric as a template to cut replacement pieces

After cutting out three pieces, I decided to add eyelets to give the fabric more strength where the string is tied.

Eyelets added to the fabric for strength

I chose 5.5mm eyelets in chrome. Using a punch I made seven holes, evenly spaced, along the edge of the fabric. The eyelets come in two parts – I placed the larger piece at the bottom, put the hole in the fabric over it, placed the smaller eyelet piece on top (to make a sandwich) and hammered them in place using the eyelet tool.

Once I’ve replaced the string they’ll be ready to fix on to the loom.

Fixing eyelets in the fabric

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