Hole punch, for making Jacquard cards

Made:
1870 in Coventry
maker:
James Heywood
Hole punch, for making Jacquard cards

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Jacquard card hand operated hole punch, for making Jacquard cards for the model Coventry Ribbon Loom, by James Heywood, Coventry, England, with tool for punching holes.

To make patterned cloth, a loom weaves together different-coloured threads into a design. In a Jacquard mechanism, the instructions for which threads to weave in each part of the design are contained in a series of cards with holes punched in them - this is an example of a device used to make the holes. The punched cards were used to control which threads in the warp were raised, a job previously done by a weaver’s assistant.

This was used with what is, or was, reputed to be the smallest working model figure loom in the World. The designer and maker of the model was J. Heywood of Coventry and Wooten-under-Edge; the inventor of the Self-Adding Cylinder for the Jacquard machine. The ribbons are figured so that two series of weft threads are used. The lower shuttle forms with the warp the groundwork of the ribbon. The other series of silks mounted at the top, form the design. A jacquard machine at the top of the loom frame, controls the shedding of the warp threads for each pick. The most noteworthy aspect of the loom is that the shuttles are always under control of two small-geared pinions per shuttle, which gear with pin teeth formed on the shuttles.

Details

Category:
Textiles Machinery
Object Number:
1911-346/3
Materials:
brass (copper, zinc alloy) and wood (unidentified)
Measurements:
overall: 80 mm x 180 mm x 85 mm, .36 kg
tool: 55 mm x 9 mm x 9 mm,
type:
card cutting machine
credit:
Heywood, Mrs. M.A.