My woven sight out of window.
seen from Germany
seen from Italy

seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from Italy
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Bulgaria
seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
My woven sight out of window.
We are halfway through November, so I think it’s time (🙈) to let you know that this month all of my woven scarves (ready to ship AND made to order) are 15% OFF! This sale is live both on my website and in my store on Etsy. ⠀ This sale will last until Nov 31, midnight. But stay tuned for more announcements for Black Friday and cyber Monday deals in a week or so😉. ⠀ Have a lovely weekend!❤️. ⠀ . #weaving #handwoven #wivenscarf #wovenwrap #longscarf #scarfstyle #scarfseason #scarffashion #scarfdesign #scarf #handmade #shopsmall #smallbusiness #smallbusinessowner #etsy #etsyseller (at Rocklin, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/B48mu3wpLFr/?igshid=eh7pk4rkh9x9
GLITCHAUS BUG HONEY GLITCHAUS BUGってハニー
ed.002 in a new series of official glitch textiles from glitchaus. this motif was created with a technique pioneered in 2001 to generate knit and woven textile motifs. throws are woven in 100% cotton and measure 54x70” (137x177cm)
0rder 0nline
#🐞🍯
@beingbartonchannel gave me her no longer needed baby wrap and Azure and I have been practicing our tie ups. I still need to get him higher, but this thing is a savior for the last half hour of awake time before naps. Keeps him calm and happy while I finish getting things done like taking care of dogs, laundry and dishes. #babywearing #wovenwrap #bwiatlanta #azurelewis #securedhighbackcarry
When your daughter asks for the wrap you're trying to sell... And it still have sleepy dust! #babywearing #breastfeeding #normalisebreastfeeding #normalisenaturaltermbreastfeeding #Girasol #wovenwrap #attachementparenting
Giving my shoulders a break today with a torso carry 😊
Liliana Winter: Patience, Practice, and Progress
When I first bought my Liliana Winter, I didn’t know she would become such a symbol of growth for me. The girl I purchased her from mentioned it was the very last piece of fabric off the loom — a little longer than usual, though I’ve never measured to be sure. I loved the idea that this wrap was somehow one of a kind, even before I truly understood what that meant.
I had bought it on a whim, intending to use it for an overlay project for a Sakura Bloom Onbuhimo. I’d just been through the sting of a misrepresented sale — a bundle that arrived stained, incomplete, and disappointing. That experience hit hard. I had joined this babywearing community hoping for connection, inspiration, and something beautiful to hold onto. Instead, I found myself frustrated, anxious, and unsure if I even belonged here.
I was still deep in postpartum anxiety and exhaustion, desperate to feel capable again. Babywearing felt like a small piece of control I could reach for — something that could keep Sy close while giving me just a sliver of freedom back.
Discovering the Art of Overlays
Around that time, I learned about overlays — the way people transform carriers with wrap fabric. It felt magical: taking something worn and loved, and giving it new life with fabric that carries its own story. I remember asking, almost shyly, how much it cost. When I was refunded from that disappointing sale, I decided that money would go toward creating something new.
That’s how I found Liliana Winter. I imagined her as both a solution and a statement — soft but strong, art stitched into function. I didn’t know then how much she’d teach me.
Learning to Wrap: The Messy Middle
I won’t romanticize it: wrapping did not come easily for me.
There were days Sy and I both cried through attempts. I’d watch the videos, study the tutorials, follow each step, and still somehow end up with a seat popped or a knot that didn’t feel right. My arms would ache, sweat would drip, and I’d question myself over and over — Why can’t I get this?
Sy wasn’t always the most cooperative partner, either. He’s a spirited soul — curious, busy, and happiest when he can see everything I’m doing. Back carries weren’t part of his plan. He’d straighten his legs, push off me, or twist to see my face.
The more he fought, the more I panicked. Every attempt turned into a test of willpower. But eventually, I realized he wasn’t fighting me. He was just communicating, in the only way he knew how.
So I adapted. I wrapped over the bed. I added a mirror. I tied my hair back with headbands so he couldn’t yank it mid-wrap. I practiced until the panic in my chest gave way to patience — for both of us.
And that shift changed everything.
Reconnecting with Liliana
Months passed. Today, I pulled Liliana Winter off the shelf again — my first time wrapping with her in ages. She’s still everything I remember: floppy, soft, almost buttery in hand. She folds like a blanket and wraps like a hug.
I decided on a Double Hammock carry — partly for the challenge, partly for the comfort of something familiar. The extra-long tails nearly brushed the floor, reminding me of her unusual length. She’s a thick wrap but not heavy, with a balance of grip and glide that feels stable and safe.
And as I adjusted the passes and tightened the chest belt, it hit me — this wasn’t hard anymore.
The same wrap that once overwhelmed me now felt easy in my hands.
Liliana has always been patient with me, even when I wasn’t patient with myself.
She’s my reminder that growth doesn’t happen in leaps; it happens in the quiet repetition of trying again.
Reflections: Progress Over Perfection
If I’ve learned anything through this journey, it’s that progress doesn’t look like those serene photos we all admire — the ones with tidy hair, perfect seats, and smiling babies.
Real progress is the sweaty, shaky moments you power through anyway. It’s your baby crying while you breathe deep and finish tying the last pass. It’s the moment you realize your hands remember the motions even when your heart still races.
Liliana taught me that I can do hard things. She also taught me that “hard” doesn’t mean “bad.”
Some of our best things start hard.
Now, even when Sy squirms or fusses, I can stay calm. Because I know this — what once felt impossible is now possible.
ITEM DESCRIPTION: THIS IS BATIK DYE PRINT FABRIC WHICH CAN USE FOR MULTI PURPOSE ... INDIAN STYLISH CRAPE SARI UNIQUE AND COLORFUL PRINTED FABRIC / SARI .. The Designs and the print on vintage sari are unique and very rare. The vintage saris usually worn in Indian culture and associated with