Like a pro
"This has made my warping game much better. What a great product, great size and works perfectly to keep my thread in order."
Free Shipping on Orders over $150*
For warping with more than 4 ends (up to twenty threads) at once onto your warping board or warping mill. The cross is made easily by sliding the yarn up and down in the slot.
Overall rating: 4.625 / 5 from 8 reviews.
Review topics: ["thread","tool"].
"This has made my warping game much better. What a great product, great size and works perfectly to keep my thread in order."
"I love the paddle! Makes warping multiple ends straightforward and FAST"
"Great produ"
"I wish they still were all wood"
"As always the customer service was wonderful with fast shipping. The product however was a disappointment. The handle is to wide to hold easily and made it impossible to easily wind a warp. The required wrist movement to manipulate the warp threads and make the cross was not possible with a handle that is this wide. The plastic portion was weak and had so much flex that the threads did not feed well. Overall not a product I would recommend. It might work if you are clamping it to a table and not holding in your hand but that is not how it is meant to work."
"Best little tool I've purchased in a while. Made a great difference in time and energy winding more than 1 end at a time."
"I haven't had a chance to actually use it yet, but if appearances are anything I would expect this to work well. Like all of Leclerc's handmade products, this paddle is beautifully made and feels good in the hand."
"I think that the Leclerc warping paddle is a better choice than the alternatives which are not made like a ridgid heddle reed. However, I really would like to have a video of how to effectively do the cross using the paddle. I think I persevered as I had threads in a specific color order but. . . . . what happens when I have monotonal yarn? It is probably as simple as holding the paddle up then down going from the thread cross to the counting cross and then keeping the paddle in the same relative positions when creating the reverse cross. . . . . but who can remember which way you held the paddle when one is first starting!!"