I wove the above samples with unmercerized 10/2 cotton, resleying the same 8 end check to 8, 10, & 12 ends/cm. I found that the 10 ends/cm (which is about the same as 24 epi) was my favorite for clothing fabric. I knew also that I wanted to weave a blue & white check pattern for my apron fabric. This article from 18th Century Notebook provided a lot of contemporary images for checked aprons and was really helpful for deciding on the length I needed as well. I wound up perusing sample books in the online collections of Winterthur, where I found this sample book of fabrics from 1767 from Henry Remsen Jr. & Co., an importer of goods based in New York City in the 18th century. This book includes many fabric samplers including a ton of check variations. I decided on the following warp stripe pattern, which I wove in the same order with the weft colors in order to produce a check:
4 blue / 8 white / 2 blue / 2 white / 2 blue / 8 white, repeated 26 times in straight draw sett at 10 ends/cm
(So I know the teal-y blue I used isn’t exactly period appropriate but it was leftover from the check samples & what I had, so I used it.)