During the last months I have attempted to weave cloth for a dress. Using bought yarn, so at least I don't have the work of spinning. However I am weaving 80cm width at 6 threads/cm, which means I had to warp 480 threads. Also, I have so far woven 4,5m (because my loom starts to get a bit iffy if I wind too much warp), which is by far not enough for an entire dress. If I'm lucky I will be able to sew the entire body from this fabric and only need to weave additional fabric for the sleeves. Or, even better, I manage the sleeves but not the gores. We'll see. I'll keep you posted.
However, for now, the process.
1. Measuring the warp and warping the loom. This requires all the warp threads to be wound in an orderly fashion and the same length. I wound the warp in bundles of 60 threads, using 5m length
These threads are then carefully threaded through the holes in the heddle (my loom has rigid heddles), died to the warp beam and then wound in an even fashion. Once all is wound, the now free end is tensioned evenly.

2. The next step is to weave. I took a total of ~15 hrs work time to weave. However I found it difficult to weave more than 20cm before I started cramping up and my back started aching. So I took more than two months to get the weaving done - so long that I ended up
upholstering my weaving stool in the mean time.

3. I was so relieved when I finally was able to take my fabric off the loom. It had felt somewhat like a neverending story. I now wonder if I should have somehow rolled up a measuring tape with the finished fabric or something like that. Lost between a big roll of fabric and a big roll of warp it felt as though I was making no progress. But finally I had managed to use up all warp.
I cut the fabric off, tied the warp in bundles of 6 threads. Then I fixed mistakes and cut off loose weft ends. Finally I threw it in the washing machine together with felt balls. The goal was to somewhat felt the fabric, so the holes close a bit.
Now here I made some nearly-disasterous misestimates... I find it important that you know things also go wrong for me, so I thought I'd discuss them.
I had woven a samplet before and realized that the tweedy yarn that I used for nearly all this fabric, while being real wool was superwash treated to death and barely felted at all. So I used some pretty aggressive settings to felt this (soap, 60°C, full wash cycle). However I forgot that for the edging and the brown stripes I used another yarn - shetland, non-superwash. Which felts very strongly. So when I took the fabric out of the washing machine it hung like draped curtains: the edges and the brown stripes were massively shorter than the rest of the fabric. I tried to pull it straight wet, then threw it over a drying rack in a huff. Once dried, I tried to re-stretch it. I could hear the individual hairs ripping in the brown stripes but they are narrow enough that they could be pulled out. The edging did suffer at some points, ripping entirely, however it is so felted that this does not lead to the fabric unravelling, so after some pulling and ironing the fabric now does lie flat. We'll see how it behaves when wet again...

Formalities:
- Materials: woollen yarn
- Tools: warping board, loom, hook, weft stick, scissors, patience
- Time warping: 6hrs
- Time weaving: 11cm in 20 Minutes -- just under 2 Min per cm. For a total of 450cm: probably about 15hrs
- Time post-processing (taking off loom, tying, walking, etc.): 3 hrs
- Total time: ~24 hrs