Archive for the ‘Spinning’ Category

The Dog Days of Summer

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

So Monica asked for pictures of the doggies–the same doggies that entertained themselves for hours with my possum roving.  Here they are…

This is Kona:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And this is Jack:

 

Jack’s a bit languorous.

But sometimes Kona goads him into action:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And sometimes he’ll trade sleep for a belly rub.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And then he retreats to his den:

I would have more pictures of Kona, but whenever she sees the camera, she pretty much rushes to kiss it:

Yellow Jersey!

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Ooh yeah baby, that’s right.  I’ve met my self-imposed Tour de Fleece challenge.  I spun up every last tuft of that bizarro mystery fiber, and I have a total of maybe 800-ish yard of heavy worsted weight two ply.  Best part about the challenge?  This fiber would’ve languished for-freaking-ever in my stash, getting spun up in bits and pieces.  Because it wasn’t sexy–there were no great process decisions to make, no colors to watch blend or pop or merge into interesting new things, no fancy techniques.  It started out being several big lumps of animal-brown hair and it turned into many hanks of animal-brown yarn which, while a very gratifying transition indeed, was less than…  riveting

Which brought about what was *really* the best part of the challenge.  Even better than watching the fiber turn into yarn was watching my spinning turn into slightly less mediocre spinning.  Again, less than riveting, but very, very gratifying.

Tomorrow there will be pictures.  Tonight there is quiet triumph.

In Which I Make Progress

Friday, July 25th, 2008

So the Tour de Fleece is coming to a close.  Here is what I have done so far:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That is about 600-ish yards of two-ply yarn spun from the “Magical Mix” possum blend roving.  I have about 5 ounces left to spin and ply.  This should be doable, but it has been a busy, busy, busy few days.

You can see the colors changed across the ‘bumps’ of roving–ranging form a light greyish brown to a distinctively reddish foxy-y sort of color.  I am still debating dyeing the whole lot of it…

A Look Back

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

I confess, my spinning has slowed down for the past couple of days.  I have picked up some knitting projects again, and taught my daughter and her friend to spin on a drop-spindle (which was too fun), but the Tour de Fleece spinning has slowed.

So I figure today is as good a day as any to take a look back at some previous spinning projects.

first-ever spindle-spun single

 Here we have the first yarn I ever spun.  I used a drop-spindle and some blue-faced Leicester (BFL) roving I dyed using Kool-Aid.  I was thrilled with the colors, less so with the process of spindle-spinning.

 

 

 

 

First-ever plied yarn.

Here is more from the same roving, the very first yarn I even spun and plied on my Baynes wheel.  It was eventually knit into a very floppy hat.  Fun colors, though.

 

 

 

 

 

Around about the same time, I dyed this BFL and spun it.  Also Kool-Aid.  The colors made me very happy, though I’ve had trouble photographing them accurately.  Very robin’s-egg blue.  That roving was eventually spun and plied and knit:

 

 

 

 Into this very fun pattern from Knitty (Yes!  See that?  I believe I have just successfully hyperlinked some text!  Hot damn!).  I love this pattern (alright, it’s Foliage) and have knit it several times.

 

 

 

 

 

And finally, there is this lovely roving (Merino, I think) which I hand-dyed (again, the Kool-Aid).  I divided the total roving in half, and dyed each half for a long color change sequence.  Then I spun half of it, plied it, and knit it into a capelet for Daughter #1, starting with the red at the neckline and transitioning to the blue along the hem.  The second bump will eventually be knit in reverse order, blue along the neckline, for Daughter #2, ideally while she’s still small enough to wear it.  I should get some pictures of the capelet…

Necessity is the Mother of Navajo Plying

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

I have this issue when I’m spinning, and if you know how to solve it, do tell.  Let’s say I have two bobbins of singles and I’m plying them together.  Inevitably, I will run out on one bobbin before the other.  I know, in an ideal world, that my singles would be totally even and consistent and I would have the same amount on both bobbins, but it never happens that way.  So then I’m left with some random bit of single, and what to do?

In this case, I was plying the previously-mentioned superwash Merino.  Here, by the way, is the finished product, after setting the twist:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s about 150 yards of heavy-worsted.  I ran out of the peachy colorway first, leaving me with a bit of the ‘may flowers’ single left.  I switched Navajo plying (for a video demonstration, check out The Joy of Handspinning here: http://joyofhandspinning.com/spin-navajo-ply.shtml).  Navajo plying is a technique for plying from a single source.  The salient characteristics: It turns a single ply into a triple ply (meaning a.) you get a nice, thick, cushy yarn and b.) you end up with one-third the total length you started with) and it preserves color sequences.  Navajo plying is easy to do but hard to explain, which is why I recommend viewing the video if you’re unfamiliar.

Here is a close-up of the finished product in the two-ply section:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And here is a close-up of the Navajo plied section:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Because of the way you Navajo ply, it will tend to keep different-color segments of the single together, which can work to your advantage or disadvantage, depending on the effect you want to achieve.  In this case, I didn’t particularly want to preserve the color sequence, but i had that pesky bit of single left over and I didn’t want to waste it.  Since the colors were compatible, I figured I would ply it and use it as a coordinating accent in whatever I eventually knit up with this yarn.

Which brings us to another problem:  What to do with those smallish skeins of handspun…

More on the Possum

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

So after I had spun my first two bobbins of possum roving into singles, I was ready to ply.  I switched to my jumbo flyer/bobbin, because one thing that frustrated me about spinning is winding off these itty bitty little skeins when it’s all said and done.  This was the first time I had broken out the jumbo set, and I had been warned it was harder to treadle. (FWIW, I spin on a Baynes double treadle, more on that later.) (I seem to be unable to hyperlink text, so here’s their site: http://www.spinning.co.nz/index.html)

The jumbo flyer was a little harder to readle, but not terribly, though it does have a much larger ratio than what I had spun the single on. (The standard flyer comes with 5.5:1 and 7.5:1, whereas the jumbo has a ratio of 3.5:1).  Also, there are some mechanical aspects with the Baynes that I found a bit irritating when using the jumbo flyer, namely, the screw holding the rear flyer upright kept loosening (as you pivot this part to swap bobbins/flyers) and then the jumbo flyer would work itself loose and fall.  (Major PITA).  But the extra capacity was lovely.

I plied my first batch to neutralize the twist in the single, so I had a balanced yarn.  Unfortunately, it was also hideously under-plied.

Hideously underplied yarn.

I didn’t realize this until after I had already set the twist though–which is funny, since it’s totally obvious.  (Since this is a mix of possum and other exotic fibers, I soaked it, brought it up to a boil, plunged it into cold water, flung it a couple of times, and then hung to dry.)

By then, I was ready to ply my second set of singles, which I had spun a little tighter, and then consciously twisted more in the plying stage.  The result was a rounder, tighter, overall nicer yarn.  I plied it until it was a little past balanced (when doubled-back on itself, it would coil up with a loose twist):

After setting the twist as mentioned above, it relaxed into a (basically) balanced, cushy, two-ply.  and I was stoked:

Now I’m debating about color–I love the natural color of the yarn, which has a lot of variation, but I’m planning on knitting this into a vest for my dad, who is not into brown, so much.  So I am debating dyeing it burgundy/marroon-ish.  So far I’ve finished up about 400 yards, and have another bobbin full of unplied single.

Sometimes You Just Want Easy

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Ah, yes, lovely.  I needed a break from the possum, the monochrome, the fur.  I spun up a teeny bit of two different superwash merino pencil rovings (probably 4 oz. total)I had in the stash (this is the Tour de Fleece and all).  One colorway was clled “May Flowers” and was white with lavender, sage green, and yellow.  Not my favorite colors, but I liked how it spun up–as usual, the roving utterly belies the single.

single of May Flowers

(I wish I had taken pics of the roving stage.)  The second colorway is called “Faith,” and it’s all sorts of peachy-pinks. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The two were not an obvious match, at least not to me, but I had this niggling curiosity…  I suspected the muted greens in the first single might simultaneously make the pinks “pop” and also subdue the overall yarn, while the purples (which tended to be darker) and the whites (lighter, naturally) would add interesting contrast and complexity.

So I plied.  It took much less plying than the possum, so my first few yards were a snarly mess, but in the end I was delighted with the result.  The merino is stupendously soft, and has so much sheen that I would think it had some silk if I didn’t know better.  Also, it doesn’t get any easier than pencil roving. 

(Rovings procured on ebay at http://stores.ebay.com/THE-SPECIAL-TEA-SHOP)

P.S., Dogs Like Possum

Monday, July 14th, 2008

So why it wouldn’t occur to me that my dogs would be even more intrigued by a possum-fur-roving than I was, I don’t know.  But here was the result:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Actually, that was not quite accurate, because the *real* result was four ounces of what had been neatly-coiled sliver rendered into bits and pieces and spread all over my room.  I almost cried.  Almost.  Instead, I gathered it all into a box and ignored it for months, then dragged it out last week for the Tour de Fleece.  And here is the result:

Tour de Fleece and Blogging

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

So I used to have a blog, and for a variety of reasons I have failed at keeping it up, and was bound and determined to do it over again but–alas and alack–I have been fettered by my utter incapacity for things computer-related.  Enter the good people at Word Press and their too-good-to-be-believed “Free Install” team and–shazam!–I once again have a blog.

What prompted my re-entry into the increasingly populous blogosphere?

The Tour de Fleece. (link in side bar until I figure out why I can’t insert it here.)

So here was my tour de fleece goal: to spin up the roughly 1.25 lbs. of a certain roving I’ve had in my stash for some time.  (pictures to follow, welcome to my learning curve.)

The roving was called “Magical Mix” and came, as do many things strange and mysterious, from ebay.  Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to contact the seller, and it appears to no longer be available, but i do remember it contained possum fur, and I think camel, and perhaps some wool.  It is the natural tan-brown-grey color one would associate with various animal undercoats, sometimes greyer sometimes redder, and it is soft, but has some random white or black guard hairs (goat? llama? dog? who knows).  The wildly variable staple length ranges from a low of maybe 2 inches to a high of maybe 6.  if you don’t count the sporadic little downy clumps which have no length at all, only puffiness.  It is, in short, a trainwreck, and I love it.