Sunday, July 22, 2007
Dye Day Summer 2007
I promise to get a picture or two up as soon as I can. I did spin a bit of the BFL tonight and will try to spin at least about 15 minutes a day as recommended in several books.
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Prologue
September, 2006: Joined a local spinning group that meets once a month. Even though I am not spinning, I liked to watch other spinners, it is so relaxing to watch and they seem so relaxed with what they are doing. I plan to sit and knit and watch.
October 2006: My good spinning friend loaned me her spindle and some fiber. I played with it a bit at this months spinnnig group. I was very self conscious of what I was doing and feeling a bit foolish. I learned to Park and Draft and was able to at least go home and practice that method. Within a month or so, I gave it back to her saying I did not have time to take on a new hobby. I barely had time to work and do the hobbies I do have (knitting, scrapping, sewing) and I had projects galore in the "pending" file. I had no intention of getting into this spinning thing.
February 2007: I attended my first Spa, Knit and Spin. Four of us traveled to Portland, ME as a group with the intent of stopping at the Bosworth's in Acton, MA so I could purchase a Midi Drop Spindle to use during the weekend. The Valentine's 2007 winter storm forced us to drastically alter our plans for the weekend by our leaving Tuesday night before the storm started. We arrived late that night to the hotel and stayed 5 nights, being inside and all nice and cozy through it all. What a relaxing weekend. Over the course of the weekend, I knit, but I also fumbled on and off with the drop spindle. I finally got it and was able to spin and draft as the spindle twirled below my hands. On the way home, we stopped in Acton and I bought a lovely Oak Maxi spindle. (I liked it the best of what was there to choose from that day). It had a nice spin and feel to it.
As far as fiber, I purchased a BFL Sampler from Spunky Eclectic's booth and a beautifully colored, hand dyed batt from Indigo Moon - who was selling all of her stock at this weekend and no longer going to be in business. I was also gifted with Louise from a friend. Louise is her sheep and she is not sure what breed of sheep she is, but a mix. Louise is a lovely brown fiber very easy to spin on both a wheel and a spindle.
March 2007 (I think): I was taken with the spindle thing and also with the square whorl spindle, so I ordered one from Spindlewood in a bird's eye maple. It is a beauty and about a midi weight. Now I had 2 spindles.
April 2007: I was making good progress spinning various fluffs on my spindle and attended my first Sheep and Wool festival in CT. I did not buy any more fiber with Louise and the BFL aplenty to keep me busy. I did buy some yarn and some hand made soap. I also bought a cute little mini niddy noddy - a lovely dark smooth wood.
I think it was either March or April, at my Spinning Group's monthly meeting, my friend allowed me to spin for the whole meeting on her Schacht Wheel while she guided me and used her electric wheel for her own spinning (don't any spinners have just one thing to spin on???). Below is a picture of my finished plyed skein:
April-Early May 2007: Did some dyeing of Knitpicks natural Sockweight yarn using a warping board described in a Spin-Off issue from 2006. Some pictures:



May 2007: I attended NH Sheep and Wool. I headed first to the Bosworth's Journey Wheel booth as I knew I wanted a Midi spindle of his and possible a Mini as well. Yes, these things are addicting. I bought a Midi in Purpleheart wood and a Mini in Pau Amarillo. The Midi is a deep burgundy-purple and the Mini is a lovely yellow-honey tone. They complement each other nicely. If you are keeping count, yes, I now have 4 spindles! In addition, I now "needed" a regular size niddy noddy. I bought not one but two of course. An Ashford and then a greatly marked down Bosworth niddy. One of our final booth stops for the day was at a seller who had a Lendrum DT wheel on display. Three of us sat down to try it out and it amazed me that for the first time at a wheel I had little frustration and no breaking of the yarn going through the orifice. Maybe the tension and whorl settings were just right this time but I liked the style, the ease, and all that came with it. I was very close to buying it right then and there. The 3 of us asked if she would give us a deal if we bought 3 complete DT wheels right there. She really was not interested in any markdowns and only had the one on display. That was better for me anyway, so I could "think" about it. Well, "think", I did and that was all I could do. I had a busy rest of May coming up due to 2 children's graduation and one being 800 miles away. I needed to get through all that and then get the wheel. In the meantime, one of the friends interested in purchasing the Lendrum did some online research, as did I. We were convinced to get one for ourselves. We ordered them from The Woolery. Free shipping and a nice padded bag for only $50 more cinched the deal. It arrived to my house the Monday after my son's graduation weekend.
June 4, 2007: My Lendrum DT complete arrives in 2 boxes. Some free Icelandic fiber is included. Setup was a bit funny with DH helping. We set her on the dining room table and had some laughs over the meager instruction sheet talking about the "footman" and the "mother of all". She was quickly set up and all I did was look at it for a few days. Four bobbins were included and over the next week or so, I randomly tried spinning various fibers I had around. Some Louise, the Icelandic stuff they included, and some random white fluff of unknown variety I had amassed. Most of my attempts were with poor results and I tossed most of my sparsely filled bobbin contents. I decided I needed to pick one fiber and spin it till it was gone while I ironed out the kinks.
June 27, 2007: A mini meeting at my house with 3 other spinning friends got me going in the right direction. I worked only on Louise that day and decided to just do that until it was gone.
July 7, 2007 (or thereabouts): I finished my spinning basket. Many of my spinning friends have the round Bolga baskets. I searched ebay and found a fair number of them. It was hard to judge the sizes given and whether I thought they would be wide and deep enough for all my stuff. I had gone to LLBean Outlet store in Nashua, NH, a couple weeks ago and bought an awesome deep basket that they sell for storage in a pretty blue. I immediately thought spinning. Since I am tall and it is deep, it was good for me, but my shorter friend thought it would be too tall for her to comfortably carry around. What I 'finished', was sewing pocket liners for 2 of the adjacent insides to hold my stuff in a somewhat organized fashion.Here are some pictures:



July 14, 2007: I finished Louise. She is now sitting on 2 bobbins until I have time to learn to ply her.Today, I also attended the Knit/Crochet summer show in Manchester, NH. I went only for the shopping and spent about 3 hours there. I made some knitting purchases but there was not a lot in the way of spinning fiber or accessories. Just more projects for my "pending" file and more yarn for my stash.
July 20, 2007: I tried a new fiber - some of the various white unknown stuff I have accumulated, gifted from others. It is not going well and I have to ask my spinning friends for some advice. I find that as I spin it - it wants to be spun thin. But it all breaks very easily and everything on the bobbin just breaks apart with a tug, and doesn't feel soft at all. All I know is that is not good. I may decide to not spin it at all, ever. I pulled out the BFL (Blue Faced Leicester) fiber that I bought at SPA. It is truly lustrous, shiny, smooth and drafts easily out of your hand. I had only spun one of the 3 colors on a spindle. I decided to put the 2nd color on the wheel. I started it and it is going nicely. The books say that it is soft next to the skin. I like that quality. Long staple of 3 to 6 inches also contributes to easy spinning. I have noted a number of bloggers say that BFL is their favorite. I am going to keep going with this color on the wheel and when it is done, see how much I get as compared to the first color I did on the spindle. The final color in that sampler was a natural white and there is a lot more of it than either of the other 2 colors. Not sure how I will want to ply it all but will decide later. Right now I don't really know what I am spinning for, other than the "process" of learning.
July 21, 2007: To date, I have looked at numerous books, texts, and videos on the subject of spinning. The videos are great as I am a visual learner. I have learned that I like Mabel Ross' style of writing and have some of her books and Encyclopedia of Spinning. Most of her stuff is out of print and hard to come by and expensive. I have borrowed some from my awesome local library and bought the Encyclopedia of Spinning from Ebay. In Sheep's Clothing by Nola and Jane Fournier is a great reference to types of sheep/wool and their characteristics. Color in Spinning by Deb Menz also just arrived and looks like a great reference for my future fiber arts and working with coloring my handspuns.
Today I woke up wanting to get back to the BFL and did so. I find that I need to give it more twist than I was originally thinking, in order for it to hold on the bobbin. When I double back my strands on themselves, they are nice, soft and rather even looking. That is a miracle. But my yarn did break at one point, and when I pulled the end off the bobbin to re-thread through the orifice, it was all sliding apart - not holding the twist at all off the bobbin. I put more twist in it before putting it back on the bobbin. I hope that is what it needs.
That's all for today and getting this blog started. I was thinking that I may try to post every day that I do some spinning to report my progress. I will get some pictures of my finished stuff and progress, to post, when I have them.