TradiTional Building MeThods
Willow weaving
An ancient craft requiring strength and skill, willow weaving is a bit like
weaving cloth, except using young tree branches instead of thread.
Weaving with willow
© Cornish Willow
What is willow weaving?
Willow weaving is the skilled craft of twisting young
willow branches together to make fences, animal pens,
shelters, gates, household furniture, baskets and more.
Willow weaving was even used to make walls for
houses, as it was used to make the ‘wattle’ in wattle
and daub.
Materials and preparation
Young willow branches would have been gathered
from areas of local woodland that had been coppiced.
To coppice a willow tree, it was cut right back to
its stump, which encouraged it to grow lots of new
branches quickly. These young thin branches, which
were perfect for weaving, were then harvested and,
once soaked in water to make them more �exible,
could be used straight away.
In marshy �at areas willow could also be grown in
‘willow beds’. In a willow bed, live branches of willow
were planted upright, where they took root and grew
quickly. They were then harvested annually and used
in the same way as willow from coppices.
Building with willow
Willow is still woven in the same way
as it was at the time Launceston
Castle was built. To make a woven
willow ‘hurdle’, or fence, thicker
branches of dried willow are stuck in a
frame, called a ‘jig’, and then thinner willow ‘withies’
(young branches) are woven in between the vertical
sticks. Once the hurdles were ready to be put in
place, wooden posts were driven into the ground and
the hurdles tied to them to create a fence.
To make willow baskets and furniture more
decorative, the willow withies could stripped of their
bark, leaving the white wood underneath, or steamed
which turned the bark black. A combination of
colours could then be used.
Where can i see willow weaving?
Exposed to the elements, woven willow could not
survive decades, let alone centuries. However, if
completely covered up, as it was in the case of wattle
and daub walls, it could last for a very long time.
Wattle and daub wall panels, with woven willow
centres, still exist in some very old timber-framed
buildings but you cannot see the willow underneath
the daub.
Willow for sale in launceston
advanTages
Woven willow, whether in a
fence or a basket, looks very
beautiful which is why people
still use it today.
disadvanTages
Willow was not a long-lasting
material for outdoor structures
like fences.