Category Archives: Spinning

She has arrived!

Look what arrived here this morning!

suzie

She is a Majacraft Suzie Pro bought from Hedgehog Equipment. I tried loads of different wheels while at Wonderwool. It was a great opportunity to try so many different makes all together. Then had a big think during the rest of our holiday in Wales, and ordered Suzie when we got home again.

I love her 🙂 She spins so smoothly and has a beautiful green wheel. I spent a good chunk of today putting her together (I am rather slow at anything resembling DIY – I am someone who actually does read the instructions, often multiple times before embarking). Then had a little bit of a spin with some natural black shetland bought at Wonderwool (there will actually be a post on Wonderwool once I get my act together). I am just going to go and stroke her again before I dash out for band rehearsal.

My first handspun finished project

I’m afraid I am in catch-up mode again. I have finally got round to downloading the pictures from the camera from about the last month, but I think it will take me a while to sort out.

I have sorted a picture though of my very first finished project from my own handspun! I am so ridiculously proud it is silly 🙂

handspunmoebiusfinished

There is a definite difference between the centre, which was my first skein of 2ply, and the edges, which was my first skein of 3ply, but I have decided it gives it character 🙂

More spinning

I’m afraid I have got a bit out of order with my organising my spinning. I actually made this yarn before I did the dyed yarn I talked about before. This is more natural brown Bluefaced Leicester. This time spun into my first 3 ply. I am definitely getting more even and a bit finer than before.

bfl3ply

I am using this to knit the other half of my moebius scarf. The difficulty being that it is noticeably different to the 2ply I started the scarf with. Oh well, I will enjoy it anyway 🙂

Dyeing fibre

About a month ago I had my first proper go at dyeing fibre. I had dyed a small amount last summer at a workshop, and I managed to accidentally felt a bit so this time I decided it would be safer to try some superwash fibre.

sockfibre

My plan was to dye fibre that I planned to spin into yarn for socks. I started off with superwash Bluefaced Leicester tops. It is nice and soft and I find it not too difficult to spin. I thought the superwash treatment would make for good easy care socks, and also minimise the likelihood of me accidentally felting it while dyeing 🙂

I dyed up 150g of fibre to be on the safe side, especially since my spinning is not that fine yet and so it would probably come out as quite thick sock yarn. I planned to spin a 3 ply yarn, so first split my tops in half, one for each sock. Then split each of these into three, one for each ply. I lined them all up together, then dyed them in sections from one end to the other.

I have started the spinning and have completed the first skein and am part way through spinning the singles for the second. Unfortnately I got a bit tired and impatient with the first skein and made a bit of a pigs ear of the plying, but over all its not bad for an idiot 🙂

sockyarn1

It is thicker than a commercial 4ply but thinner than DK and is fairly uniform (oh the wonders of 3ply). I am hoping that the second skein will be better without being too different to the first so that my finished socks will at least look related. This is all so much fun!

sockyarn2

A slippery slope

In a quiet moment (!) while we were at Unravel, Lisa showed me how to spin on an Ashford traditional wheel, borrowed from the West Surrey Guild of Spinners, Weavers, and Dyers, which had been brought along for demonstrations. I have been resisting spinning for ages. Mostly because I really like to knit with nice even yarn, and I had seen a lot of lumpy bumpy hand spun and thought that it just wasn’t for me. The process fascinates me though, and Lisa is such an enabler 🙂 and I didn’t really take too much persuading 🙂 The guild very kindly lent me the wheel and I have been having a very enjoyable time playing with it. I think I will need to do a lot more practicing before I am making even yarn, but I am improving (if slowly) and am enjoying myself immensely.

Below are my first spinning attempts, working from left to right. The brown is Bluefaced Leicester, the purple Merino, and the pink is mystery wool dyed at a workshop I went to last year (and slightly felted in the process). I’m afraid I am not including the attempt at Navajo plying which went so badly wrong that it ended up as a big tangle and is actually unknittable! These are all 2ply yarns, plied using Andean plying, and are about chunky weight.

firstspinning

Then I decided I wanted to have a go at spinning two singles and then plying them together from a lazy kate. Unfortunately when the wheel went to the demonstration it only had one bobbin with it. The guild owned another 3 bobbins and a lazy kate but they were in storage, so until I could borrow them I improvised with loo rolls as my bobbins and a cereal packet with a couple of knitting needles stuck through it as a lazy kate.

Here is my first singles.

1stsingles-1

I am getting better, and it is finer too. This is natural brown Bluefaced Leicester again. I find it not too difficult to spin. I found the merino harder, but I think that may have been that I should have fluffed it up a bit more before spinning, I shall try again soon.

So I spun another singles, and plyed it up into this.

1st2ply

I am so ridiculously proud! It looks like yarn! Admittedly slightly lumpy yarn, but it is recognisable as something one might want to actually knit with. It is about DK weight.

With that in mind I have started knitting a moebius scarf, so the skein above became this:

hanspunmoebius1

The only difficulty is that I have now knitted the whole skein but it is about half the size I would like for a scarf. I am now experimenting with spinning my first 3ply, and hoping that they will be sufficiently compatible that I can work the other half of the scarf in that.

And these were out a couple of weeks ago in our garden. They were just so beautiful I had to take their picture. Spring is here!

crocuses