Basketmaking
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Weaving
Knitting
Bobbin Lace
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Dalton House
Ezell-Peavy House
1954 John Deere 60

Weaving on Farm Museum Loom

Weaving began for Elizabeth when Walden Roush, Founder of the West Virginia State Farm Museum at Point Pleasant asked her to help in Louise's Loom House--so named in honor of his wife. Elizabeth, as Mr. Roush's assistant, was a weaver there for several years and is shown here warping the museum's four-harness Weaver's Delight. She wove rag rugs for sale in their Country Store and demonstrated weaving to thousands of school children and visitors.

This loom is part of the textile tool collection of the Farm Museum but the picture is included in this page just to tell the story of how it all began. This photograph was also used in a set of note cards printed by the Department of Agriculture that were sent to WV state congressional leaders to encourage their funding of the Farm Museum.

Woven Rag Rugs

When Elizabeth was a weaver at the West Virginia State Farm Museum she made rag rugs on their looms that were sold at the Country Store. After she had woven about five or six rugs on the loom, she would cut them off and bring the lot home to finish. After cutting the rugs apart, she would knot the fringe while she watched TV at night.

Louet David Loom

On Elizabeth's Louet David loom at home, she wove the color sampler shown above. The loom was first warped with an 18-step color spectrum of wool yarn. She then used the same 18-step spectrum as weft. The resulting sampler shows a total of 324 color combinations in each tabby and twill. This kit was purchased at the Yarn Barn in Lawrence, KS.

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