Author Archives: Heather

Sunshine merino/silk

Another rest day for the cyclists, so some more catching up.

Those of you with very long memories may remember that for the Tour de Fleece last year I was spinning some sunshine yellow 70% merino, 30% silk into a 3ply sock yarn. I finally finished in November:

I have a total of 193g, and 1209m, it is a 3ply construction and a bit thinner than a commercial 4ply in thickness. I’m not sure what I am going to do with this yet as it has come out a bit thinner than I was planning. I had originally thought socks, but now I am not sure. More thinking needed.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Days Thirteen, Fourteen, and Fifteen

No posts on Friday or Saturday (and no spinning progress either) because I was out at Knit Nation, attending some fantastic classes and generally having a great time. My last class was this morning, and I got home just in time for tea, I am now absolutely shattered! I will do a proper post about it soon when I have recovered.

We recorded all the cycling so I have quite a lot of that to catch up with. I have made a start on that and made a good start with my second bobbin of alpaca/merino.

Today’s coin is a South African 1 Rand.

I think I shall have a very early night tonight.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Twelve

Bastille day and the cyclists ride into the Pyrenees for the start of the serious mountains. Slightly surprising in who did well and who did badly today, it looked hard work for all concerned.

I have had fun cramming as much yarn as possible onto my bobbin 🙂

Today’s coin is a £2 celebrating the Commonwealth Games.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Eleven

More beautiful scenery as the cyclists go through the Tarn region, although rotten weather for the finish. It has been cold and grey here but luckily not wet. I haven’t been to this area of France but it looks lovely, another place to add to the list of nice places to visit.

It was spinning group at Seale today so the spinning progressed well. We spin in the Manor Farm Craft Centre Tea Room which was not quite as busy today as it sometimes is. They make lovely homemade soups and cakes so I had tomato, celery and lentil soup for lunch and carrot cake and tea for a treat afterwards 🙂

In amongst all that eating I did manage to spin a bit more on the alpaca/merino:

I think the colour is growing on me.

Today’s coin is a Japanese 100 yen.

Tomorrow I get to play the fun game where I see how much yarn I can pack onto the bobbin (its a game that never gets old 🙂 ).

 

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Ten

A good day here. I managed to finish the current stage of a work project, and then it was an exciting race for the cyclists, with no major crashes.

Also last night was a speaker meeting at spinning group with Teresinha Roberts talking about Woad and Indigo. Really interesting talk, I hadn’t realised there were so many different kinds of indigo, and Teresinha was a very good and knowledgeable speaker. She also let me have a go on her rakestraw spinner which was great fun!

I managed to do a bit of spinning today too. I am now working on the 70% alpaca, 30% merino fibre in Cappuccino that I bought from John Arbon last October. I have about 600g and the plan is to spin a 2ply to a thickness of somewhere between a commercial 4ply and DK, and make a nice big soft squishy shawl. Here is my progress so far:

The coin is a £2 celebrating the discovery of DNA.

I thought I would give your eyes a rest after the searing orange of the last week, but I am a little concerned about the beige-ness of the current yarn. I think I like it, but I’m not totally sure yet.

I also realised today that I had forgotten to photograph my new tool for becoming a more consistent spinner. I have been making myself little record cards, which I think I shall do for any project over about 100g. The idea being that I write down what I am doing and attach a sample to the card and then I can keep comparing the stuff I am spinning to my sample. It usually takes me months and months to actually finish things, so I thought this would be a good memory jogger.

So here we have my first two sample cards:

At the top I have information on what the fibre is, where I got it from and what ratio I am using on my wheel. Then there is a sample of the single, a sample of the plied yarn, and at the bottom the plied yarn after it has been washed.

The only problem I have had so far has been finding suitable record cards. The ones I bought are a bit flimsy and more paper-like than card-like. For these two sample cards I have created my own laminate by sticking three layers of record cards together to make something a bit more rigid. It has worked ok but is not ideal. I think next I might try finding some card and cutting it down to a reasonable size.

 

Devon Fibre Weekend 2010

The cyclists are having a well-deserved day off today, so I thought I would have a break from the spinning and catch up with some other bits and pieces from the last six months.

Back at the end of October I went to Devon for Terri‘s second lovely Fibre Weekend. The Friday starting early with me packing all my stuff in the car, having a think and then re-packing. Then I finally set off to collect Marty, and re-packed the car, and then down to collect Joanne, and you guessed it, re-packed the car again. I was quite impressed that you could get three people, three spinning wheels and their luggage including bedding in a Nissan Note, and no-one had to be strapped to the roof or balance their spinning wheel on their head, though Joanne was squashed in the back with a wall of stuff along side her.

Luckily the drive down was nice and uneventful, and we arrived at Sheldon in time to unpack the car and eat our packed lunch before the afternoon’s workshops started. I had signed up for natural dyeing with Amanda Hannaford, which was great fun, and very interesting. Amanda sent us the mordant recipe so we could mordant our yarn before we arrived. I used some 4ply weight superwash bluefaced leicester wool, and made myself a selection of mini skeins so I could try the different dyes.

Here are some of the skeins we dyed drying outside:

And here is everybody’s skeins laid out for everyone to admire:

Here are my 12 little skeins:

From left to right they are: madder x 3, weld x 1, goldenrod x 3, logwood x 1, indigo x 2, and cochineal x 2, all using an alum mordant. I like some of the colours better than others, but it was fun to try it all, and interesting to see the results.

After Terri’s fantastic cooking for dinner and a bit of knitting and spinning we all fell into our beds in time to get a bit of sleep in before the excitement of Saturday’s outing.

Saturday was our busy day, lots to do, so we set off early to go to the David and Charles book shop. There didn’t seem to be quite as many craft books this year as previously, but I did find a copy of Girolamo Cardano’s Ars Magna (English translation) for £1 so I was happy 🙂

Then back in the minibus and on to Coldharbour Mill, where we were treated to tours of both the upstairs machinery open to the public and John Arbon‘s machines in the basement which aren’t normally viewable. I love all the machinery, and it is amazing how so much of it is recogniseably the same process as hand spinning just on a much larger scale.

In the shop at the mill I treated myself to 600g of 70% alpaca, 30% merino fibre, in Cappuccino:

After lunch at the mill it was back in the minibus again to go to Westcott Farm to see Lesley Prior and her Bowmont sheep and Cashmere goats.

Here are some of the sheep:

And here some of the goats:

It was great to see Lesley again and catch up on what is happening on the farm. It is always interesting to talk to someone so passionate about what they do.

After the tour of the farm Lesley very kindly made us all tea and fantastic scones. I couldn’t resist buying some of her lovely cashmere:

This is 4ply cashmere, 25g, 116m. I’m not sure what I am going to do with it yet, but it is such a lovely colour and feels very soft and squishy.

In the evening we all went out for a delicious dinner at the Nobody Inn, there were enough of us that we got our own room 🙂

Tired and very full we trundled back to Sheldon.

Sunday was less formal, but still packed full. In the morning we had a go at blending different colours of fibre on drum carders and hackles.

Here is some of the carding in action, with the enormous pile of fibre to choose from behind it.

And here is Terri having a go on Rachel’s hackle.

I spun up my efforts when I got home:

The red is merino blended on the hackle, and the greens are a mixture of merino with a little bit of silk carded on a Minty Fine Carder. I enjoyed having a go at this, particularly because I don’t own a carder or a hackle, it was very useful to be able to compare. I prefered spinning the fibre from the hackle, in general I prefer a combed preparation and like to spin smooth yarn, although I prefer the colours I chose with the carder. I love playing with colours and seeing the different effects you can create and would like to have more of a go at this soon.

After the tables were cleared away the floor was used to share out the two enormous bags of waste fibre John Arbon had given us, a mixture of alpaca and different wools. I decided this was best as a spectator sport!

And this is my share:

I’m not quite sure what I am going to do with it yet, but I think it will come in really handy for learning new techniques.

After a delicious roast dinner, there was just the clearing up to do, and then all too soon it was time to pack everything back in the car and say goodbye.

Very kindly Joanne gave me this sheep for doing the driving:

He has a lot of character, and is currently keeping an eye on me from on top of the printer.

And Marty gave me a skein of 4ply Alpaca/BFL which I am looking forward to dyeing:

The drive home went ok if rather slowly, there is always a lot of traffic on a Sunday afternoon.

In all a wonderful weekend. Lovely to see so many old friends and make new ones, and to have such a fun time.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Nine

The Bremen 2 Euro coin makes its triumphant return today. After some crawling around in the garden with the secateurs this morning I liberated it! It seems to be none the worse for its night outside, but I have given it a nice wash. To celebrate the retrieval it is staring in today’s photo as well as yesterday’s.

My first finished skein of this year’s Tour de Fleece.

This is 70% merino, 30% silk from Wingham Wool Work. It is about the thickness of a British commercial 4ply weight (American fingering weight), which should be a good weight for knitting socks. I spun it at a ratio of 13:1, which is the 4th speed on my Majacraft Suzie Pro. There is 231g and 892m.

It is a slightly odd weight of yarn because I bought this when I visited Wingham. When you buy fibre in person you put it yourself into the bags they supply, then they weigh it and you pay for exactly the amount you have chosen, so it doesn’t have to be in multiples of 100g. Me being my paranoid self I thought I had better add a bit more than 100g to be on the safe side, and got a bit carried away. I probably have enough here for two pairs of socks!

I think I am going to make the Cathedral socks from an old issue of Knitty. I think I shall probably make the middle size, but I might alter the ribbing so it is a bit wider as I have wide legs 🙂

During tomorrow’s rest day I shall make the difficult decision of what to start spinning next.

The cyclists had a rather dramatic day with all the crashes, it makes me doubly glad that I am at home watching it all on the telly rather than out there cycling.

 

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Eight

Today’s concert went well, fun pieces, and I only played a moderate number of wrong notes. Despite me putting sun cream on it didn’t rain! Barnes fair was very busy, lots of stands and lots of people. I didn’t really have a chance to look at the stands this time, maybe next year.

This evening we caught up with the Tour and I did a marathon of plying.

I like how it is coming out, though am a bit concerned I have underplied some of it. I shall skein and finish it tomorrow.

Today’s coin is a Bremen 2 Euro, unfortunately you wont be seeing it again because after I took this photo I dropped it into the bush and I can’t find it.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Seven

It has been another wet day here, though it has perked up a bit this evening.

I have finished the last of the singles of the merino/silk. Here are all three bobbins, waiting for me to start plying tomorrow:

The bobbin on the right is the one I finished today.

I love the scenery of the Loire that they cycled through today. So many lovely places to visit. Their lunch station was just down the road from the campsite where we spent our honeymoon.

Le Tour de Fleece 2011: Day Six

The longest stage of the tour today for the cyclists. I haven’t had quite that long to spin today, but we do seem to be having the same filthy weather as they are in France. I am hoping it will cheer up a bit by the weekend as I am playing in an outdoor concert with Barnes Concert Band on Saturday.  If anyone is local and feels like popping along, we will be playing in a marquee at Barnes Fair, on the green near the pond in the centre of Barnes, London, UK. We are playing from 4 til 5.30 but there will be lots of other bits and pieces going on all afternoon, and it’s usually good fun.

I made good progress on my work project during the day, and spun a bit more of my merino/silk while watching the tour this evening. Fortunately I managed to find 5 minutes when it wasn’t raining to take a picture of the progress on bobbin number 3 so far:

Today’s coin is a Gibraltar pound.

I am hopeful that I shall finish this bobbin tomorrow.

It has been rather fun the last couple of days watching them cycle through places I have been to. I am hoping I might recognise a few places when they go down through the Loire region tomorrow too.