Random thoughts of a fiber enthusiast - mostly fiber related, sometimes coherent

Category: General Page 30 of 49

General Fiber Posts

Sensitivity

Louet Northern Lights Pastels

Beautiful, isn’t it? It’s Louet’s Northern Lights, colorway Pastels. When I found it on the shelves of Purlescence Yarns, I couldn’t resist. I had to pick it up and bring it home, along with a bag of Violets colorway.

Unfortunately, as I was spinning the singles, I noticed that the palm of my hand felt a bit swollen. I didn’t think much of it at that time. I continued to spin merrily along. The package said “100% wool.” The wool felt a bit coarse to me, similar to how Corriedale feels to me.

Before you get up in arms about Corriedale being “soft,” I just want to say “to me.” I enjoy spinning silks, merinos, alpacas, cashmere, and some blends of those on a regular basis. Corriedale feels coarse to me. As far as I’m concerned, I’m unlikely to spin Corriedale again, no matter how beautiful Linda Diak’s batts are. This is very personal.

Back to Louet’s fiber. I sent an email to Louet to ask what their fiber content was — breed of sheep. They very kindly replied the next day to tell me that it was a medium wool, similar to Corriedale.

That first night, as I was sitting in bed reading, I realized that I was scratching my left hand. The hand was also very swollen. I was having problems bending my fingers. It wasn’t swollen like a full blown allergy attack, but more like I ate a bowl of salt, neat.

Yup. Wool sensitivity. I quickly slathered my hand with calamine lotion and took a benedryl. The itching and swelling was gone by morning.

This left me with the question — what do I do with the partial bobbin, and the remaining roving? I took a latex glove, and snipped all the fingers tips off, and finished spinning and plying the yarn. In retrospect, if this ever happens again, I would only snip the fingers required for drafting — the index finger and thumb. My pinky finger was tingling quite a bit when I was done. But it wasn’t anything like it was before.

(Really, if I was really sane, I should have donned a hazmat suit, and remove the singles from the bobbin, and tossed that along with the unspun fiber directly into the garbage. But the Frugal Annie in me couldn’t waste perfectly good fiber.)

However, it was clear that this was not going to be a pair of socks for me, as I originally intended. It was also clear that, whether I can handle it for next to skin wear or not, I was not going to be able to knit with it. So, I packaged up the plied yarn and the unspun package of Violets and gave it to Sonja.

Last heard, Sonja was enjoying knitting a pair of socks with it. She doesn’t appear to have any problems with the wool. Good for her. I’m glad that the wool found a good home.

So, the PSA? You can be sensitive to some wools and not others. Don’t panic and say that you can’t wear all wools. Check around and carefully test other breeds of sheep. And wool sensitivity isn’t the same as wool allergy. From what I understand, wool allergy is a whole different beast. My sensitivity is what Martin would have called “contact dermatitis.” Breathing it didn’t cause an asthma attack.

Of course, it’s possible that I wasn’t sensitive to the wool at all, but the dye. Unfortunately, since it was a packaged/mass produced product, I’m not able to break it down any further for scientific experiments. There are at least 2 unknowns: breed of sheep and the type of dye used. There might be additional factors, such any other chemicals used during processing, from the mordant used to the soap that they used to wash the finished wool.

Silk Pouch and a Farewell

Silk Pouch - twined knittingI turned that Z-plied silk into this little silk pouch (click for larger image). It’s made using Tvåändsstickning, or two end knitting, which is also known as twined knitting. This is a technique that I’ve wanted to try for over a year, but kept putting off because I never got around to spinning my own z-plied yarn, as Ann-maj Ling recommends in her book, Two-End Knitting.

This all came about because I received Piecework Magazine in the mail on Thursday. It is a beautiful issue, focused primarily on folk knitting. In addition to the twined knitting article by Nancy Bush, there was also a wonderful article about the history of the purse, with a pattern for the Miser’s Purse. I highly recommend this issue to any and everyone interested in knitting history.

I combined the two ideas (twined knitting and purses) into a little project. I plan to make a little braid strap for the top and add some beads to the bottom. This is sized to hold my little bottle of spinning wheel oil.

Stats: about 5 gm of Chasing Rainbows silk spun S/Z, knitted on 2.25 mm dp needles, 2.25″ diameter at the top, 4″ in length. 2 hours to spin and ply, and about 4-6 hours to knit up. Since I didn’t use up all the yarn I spun up, this is definitely a quick 1 day or weekend project to play with.

As the astute of you out there might notice, it looks like faux fair isle when used with handpainted yarn. Unfortunately, there isn’t enough contrast in this yarn to really show it off. The fabric is extremely dense and cushy. I can see why this is preferred in cold climates. It’s definitely warm! I know a lot of it is the silk, but I can see how fabric made with this technique will keep the wind out. But the thing that kept going through my mind while I was knitting this was — this would make a mighty luxurious pair of silk slippers. The density would make it cushy on the toes. Yum.

The creative juices are definitely flowing on this one. Higher contrast hand painted yarn to show off the two-ends playing off of each other. Worsed instead of woolen spun yarn to show off the stitch texture (the silk was too fuzzy for my taste). Navajo-plied to preserve the colors, if handspun. That lincoln-corriedale roving I have in the garage would make beautiful gloves in white. And there is plenty of stash fiber. I’m sure I can find something that would be suitable for testing out the faux-isle ideas. Perhaps a hat is in order.

One might think that it would be too warm in the San Francisco area to ever warrant needing clothing made in this dense of a fabric. I am here to assure you that you need lots of very windproof, but breathable clothing for winter sailing around here. There is nothing worse than being cold, damp from your own humidity, and have the wind whistling through your clothes, while you are trying to manage the sails, or worse, standing still and steer the darn boat.

Rosie Toes
Rosie Toes
December 1993 – January 5, 2007

I had to put Rosie Toes to sleep on Friday. I had to make the decision while I was in the middle of a meeting — that was when the vet called to say, basically, anything would be extraordinary measures to save her life, and even that wouldn’t be guaranteed. She would be put through a lot of stress and pain for no sure resolution at the end. She had already been through much during the past month. She had surgery just before Thanksgiving to remove a cancerous tumor from her bowels. I just couldn’t see putting her through more surgery, when it looks like her heart was failing, and she had pneumonia to boot.

I’ve Been a Very Good Girl

Or at least, Santa thought so.

Gem II

It’s a Gilmore Looms Gem II.  Unfortunately, it doesn’t fit in through the door of the guest room.  (Santa was able to get it down the chimney but not through the guest room door, sigh.)  I’ll be re-arranging the living room in the coming days.

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