English edit

Etymology edit

heddle +‎ hook

Noun edit

heddle hook (plural heddle hooks)

  1. A hooked implement used to thread a strand of the warp through the eye of a heddle.
    • 1984, Blair Tate, The Warp: A Weaving Reference[1], page 96:
      Threading can be done either by catching each warp end with a bent or straight heddle hook, or by using the fingers as if repeatedly threading large needles (heddles) with separate threads (warp ends).
    • 1990, Mary H. Blewett, The Last Generation: Work and Life in the Textile Mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, 1910-1960[2], page 88:
      You had to have a heddle hook and a reed hook, and that's about all you really needed.
    • 1990, Robert Johnstone, Belfast: Portraits of a City[3], page 137:
      The heddle hook, used to draw in the broken ends of the warp, was carried in the mouth, the small pair of weaver's scissors in the palm of the hand.

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