Vintage Nilus LeClerc Loom For Sale
Edit: Sold | Several years ago I purchased my first floor loom used from a kind woman named Mary. She, like so many weavers before, was downsizing. It was a Nilus LeClerc 45” four harness jack loom that she had purchased new in 1974. She used the loom to weave blankets and items that she would sale at fundraisers for her son’s school. She liked fuzzy, textural yarns and entrusted me with a tub of yarn that came along with the loom. The very first warps that I put on the loom were with yarn from Mary’s stash. It felt like a smooth transition from one weaver’s hands to the next. The loom is marked with notes written in pencil by Mary to herself noting heddle counts. The numbers are no longer correct, but erasing them always felt like tearing up a sweet picture from the past simply for the sake of tidying up. So the notes have stayed. Through the years I have left me own marks on the loom; from experimental warp dying, to switching out the cloth aprons to Texsolv cord. The life of an item that is made to be used shouldn’t stop at a moment in time. To do so would mean that its useful life has come to an end.
I bought this loom with big dreams of weaving yardage for clothing. Looking back it honestly makes me feel really proud to think of how much fabric—at least several hundred yards— actually came into being on this loom. It allowed me to take on my first paid weaving work and I’ll be eternally grateful.
Like Mary I now find myself not using this loom as much as I should. Whereas Mary was downing I have sized up. Through the years my needs have shifted to where I needed a wider width and more harnesses. I’ve kept this loom as long as I could, for both usefulness and sentimental reasons. I love this loom and thoroughly enjoy weaving on it, but am simply out of room. I need space to move, and room to warp my main work loom.
I keep thinking back to the day I picked the loom up from Mary. Her son, the one she wove for his school fundraisers, was there to help move the loom and load it up. He is of course now a grown man. I kept thinking about the childhood memories that he must have of watching his mother weave on this machine that he was now helping to send on it’s way. My son was three when this loom came home and he just turned 9 this week. I’m sure that his childhood memories will now also be peppered with visions of his mother sitting at the loom and the sounds of the shuttle sailing through the shed, the harnesses falling, and beater at work. Shwoop, clank, thwomp. Shwoop, clank, thwomp.
Below is the text from the FB and Craigslist listings for the loom. Please feel free to reach out here if you are interested in giving this loom a third life. It will need to be picked up in Southbury, CT.
This is a 4 harness, 6 treadle Nilus LeClerc loom with a 45" weaving width. It currently has a custom made 1 yard sectional warp beam with 1" sections. The warp beam looks a little unconventional, but I have woven several hundred yards on it and it works greats. If desired the sectional beam can easily be removed and replaced with a more conventional apron. I replaced the front cloth apron several years ago with Texsolv and a wooden dowel. I still have the original metal apron rods (minus the cloth aprons that were in very rough shape) that will go with the loom. This loom has been in regular use the whole time I have owned it and currently has a little sample warp on for folks to try out. There are some cosmetic blemishes that can be seen in the pictures. Again, this is nearly a 50 year old loom and has been used regularly by both the original owner and myself. This loom has been an absolute workhorse for me and I'll be sad to see her go. The only reason I am selling is because I have simply run our out space and now use my other looms more.
I put a new brake coil on a few years ago. I also recently replaced the original screw that held the brake brackets together with the break coil with a long bolt that now goes all of the way through the wood. My understanding is that this is a common weak spot on these older looms and a common way of securing and updating.
Made in May of 1974, I purchased this loom in the fall of 2016 from the original owner who was downsizing.
The loom will come with:
-Three reeds: 12, 10, and 4 epi (These reeds are the ones that came with the loom when I purchased it. They no longer look shiny and new, but are totally functional and are the ones that I have regularly used)
-Raddle
-the original LeClerc Warp and Weave manual book that came with this loom.
-A small bag of hand tools that came with the loom.
-If needed I will also include a set of lease sticks and an old warping board.
If the buyer needs shuttles and a bobbin winder I can sell a used hand crank metal bobbin winder and two boat shuttles to them as well for an additional fee. These are only being offered if the person buying the loom needs them to set up shop. I don't actually want to sell them otherwise.
Either a few parts of the sectional beam, or the entire back beam and warp beam section will need to be taken off of the loom in order to get it out of the door. This loom can fit in the back of a pick up truck. The total width of the loom is 56". Open to weave the current depth is 44" and can fold up to about 36". When the sectional beam is not on it can fold up a few additional inches.
*A note about the sectional beam. This can be warped using a tension box and spool rack, which are not being sold with this loom. However, I also regularly warp this loom in a traditional back to front method first measuring the warp on a warping board. I would be happy to discuss warping methods with whoever buys the loom.