About Daily Handmade

Daily Handmade is an informational resource focused on hand-weaving and natural fiber textile crafts in Canada. It covers equipment, materials, pattern structures, and historical context relevant to weavers at all levels of experience.

What This Site Covers

The content on this site is organised around three primary subjects:

  • Looms and equipment — the different types of hand looms used in Canada, including frame looms, rigid heddle looms, and floor looms, with notes on setup, scale, and structural capabilities.
  • Natural fibers — an overview of wool, linen, hemp, alpaca, and plant-based yarns used by Canadian weavers, including properties, finishing behaviour, and sourcing.
  • Weave structures and patterns — explanations of tabby, twill, and tapestry interlacement, draft notation, and practical considerations for each structure.

Content is written to be informative and accurate. Where specific technical claims are made, they are supported by references to published weaving literature or documented sources. Where exact figures are not available, the text uses descriptive language rather than invented numbers.

Editorial Approach

Articles on this site use a descriptive, neutral tone. They are not intended to promote specific products, suppliers, or approaches over others. External links are included only when they point to institutions, organisations, or resources with documented relevance to the subject matter.

The site does not track user behaviour beyond basic server-level access logs and does not use advertising networks. The cookie consent option on the main page relates to potential future analytics only; at present, no analytics scripts are active.

Canadian Context

Canada's hand-weaving community is distributed across all provinces, with active guild networks in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, and Quebec. Provincial guilds such as the Handweavers, Spinners and Dyers of British Columbia, the Handweavers Guild of Canada, and the Guilde des tisserands du Québec organise workshops, exhibitions, and mentorship. This site references their activities where relevant and does not attempt to represent or speak on behalf of any guild or organisation.

Indigenous weaving traditions in Canada are noted in context where they intersect with the topics covered — for example, the Cowichan spinning tradition in the fiber article and the Salish tapestry tradition in the patterns article. These sections are descriptive and cite documented sources. For detailed information on these traditions, readers are directed to the organisations and cultural centres mentioned in those articles.

Corrections and Updates

If you identify an error in any article — a technical inaccuracy, a broken external link, or a misattributed source — the contact form below is the appropriate channel. Articles are updated periodically; each page shows its most recent revision date.

Contact

For editorial corrections, questions about content, or general correspondence, use the form below. No commercial inquiries are handled through this form.

Email: info@dailyhandmade.org