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

Category: Spin Page 59 of 69

Insomnia

When your cramps are so bad, it wakes you up in the middle of the night. Advil isn’t doing it. You lay there moaning and wishing you could die right there and then. Can’t sleep. Can’t focus to read. Besides, your cat — the one with the toothy fang — really wants to get back to sleep, wishes that you would stop moving, and isn’t afraid to use that fang to show you her displeasure. What do you do?

You get up and spin.

z plied silk

20 grams of over-plied silk with a z-twist. Can you guess what’s next on the agenda?

Help with Niddy Noddy

While skeining up 5 oz. of lace weight yarn this evening, I broke my niddy noddy.

The picture on the left is a picture I took back in September 2003. See how the cross bar is already bowing in this photo? I had 3x the yardage on it today when it broke.

If any of you know the woodworker of the said niddy noddy, please drop me a note. (Click on image for a larger view.)

I bought the niddy noddy from Weaving Works in Seattle about 5 years ago. I remember meeting the lovely gentleman who made these beauties at Black Sheep Gathering a few years back. That logo you see on the shaft is his branding mark. Any help in identifying this would be greatly appreciated. I will trade stash for information. How’s that for incentive?

I don’t know what I would do with the information other than perhaps try and see if I can order an extra cross bar. I should be able to fashion a new crossbar with some dowels from the lumber store, but these crossbars are slightly tapered from one end to the other so that it fits snuggly in the handle but doesn’t slide all the way through.

It may not be the sturdiest niddy noddy for winding on a lot of yardage, but I absolutely love the wood and the finish.

So, in addition to finding or fashioning a new crossbar, I need to buy a new niddy noddy. Any suggestions out there for favorites? Aesthetics are just as important as design and function. What about a skeinwinders? I would think that skeinwinders would be better for lots of yardage — although the winding lots of yardage on to the niddy noddy is a great way to tone the upper arm. Besides, I love the way it breaks down for workshops and such.

The Perfect Sock Yarn

This is a two-fer post — Black Bunny Hop and Dye-Spin-Knit-along. Not that I actually signed up for either, but there you go.

I think I have perfected the perfect handspun sock yarn. Before I go any further, I have to admit that I have never knit a pair of socks from my own handspun. Never. (Actually, I still haven’t yet, since I’ve only finished the first sock of the pair.) I’ve spun yarn from fibers that I’ve intended for socks, but for some reason, I never actually made socks from them. They never really seem “right,” but I didn’t know what “right” was either.

May I present to you…the perfect sock yarn…

Sock Yarn

The blue-green yarn is my handspun (aka the perfect sock yarn). The variegated yarn is Koigu.

Now, why is it perfect? Because it is soft, lofty, and squishy, just like Koigu. The fiber is blue-faced leicester from Black Bunny Fiber. I spun the singles using my variant of a long draw, so the yarn retained a lot of the loft. And I remembered what several of my past spinning instructors have told me … “underspin, overply.”

I never asked any of them exactly what that meant. In the comfort of my own home, and not having the experts nearby to explain to me, I decided that the “overply” part meant that your singles have set somewhat on the bobbin. Thus, the resulting plied yarn will appear a bit overspun while you are spinning it. Once wetted, the twist will relax back to a balanced yarn.

In the case of this particular yarn, I didn’t get a perfectly balanced yarn after I washed the finished yarn. When I hung it up to dry, there were still some kinks in the yarn. The skein didn’t twist back on itself, but there were kinks in the individual strands (sorry, I don’t take a picture of it while it was drying). Anyway, I didn’t weigh it down to block. I just left it to kink and dry, because I want to preserve the sproingy-ness of the yarn. (Note the high angle of twist in the ply, just like Koigu.)

The end result is what you see above. A puffy yarn that has really good structure and will wear well.

Sock(click image to see details)

The sock is knitted from the toe up on size 1 needles. It’s a really dense fabric because I don’t want this pair of socks to wear out too quickly. After all, I spun it!

Page 59 of 69

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