It's sheep-shearing time here in the Bluegrass, and I am helping my friend Sarah to shear sheep, including our Shetlands, Lana and Nina.
That put me into the wool spinning mood, so I've been using the old Eastern European supported spindle to spin more yarn for the years-long project to make blankets for the twins.
The Eastern European spindle, which was hand-turned on a lathe who knows how long ago. |
Given that to date the project has involved shearing the sheep, picking the fleece, scouring the fleece in warm soapy water, drum-carding the wool, and spinning the wool, I measure progress in years. A few years ago I sent several fleeces to two mills to be made into roving, so I could skip the cleaning process, but haven't spun more than a few yards of that.
Now I have several thousand yards, enough to weave a small blanket, and need that much again for the second one.
Here is the spindle-spun wool.
114 yards of hand-spun wool from the spindle |
Here is a 185-yard skein spun on the Polish Kromski wheel. The wheel-spun wool is a little more consistent in feel, but not by much.
Comparison with my wheel-spun wool |
Given that progress is in fits and starts, we have years ahead. :)
Here I am winding a spindle full of yarn onto the yarn swift my dad and I made years ago. One full revolution is 1 yard of yarn.
Yarn swift from the top... |
...and the side. |
The swift comes apart into pieces to make storage easier.
Yarn swift in pieces. |
Happy springtime, everyone!
I have a post about some transition stays almost ready...