One thing I’ve been doing a lot more of lately is spinning! I thought I’d share some photos of my handspun yarn.
First up: Sleepy Hollow
My husband bought me the 2nd and 3rd shipments from the brand-new Rockin’ Whorl Club (by Blue Moon Fiber Arts). My friend Jen got the first shipment, so I was able to see the roving and read the dyers notes for that as well.
The 2nd shipment had two braids of dyed-to-match roving. The bigger one was 5 oz of 100% BFL mix; the smaller, 3 oz of 50/50 merino and mulberry silk.
The notes suggested that we spin the BFL fluffy, and the merino/silk skinny, and then ply them holding the skinny ply a bit tighter so that the fluffy ply to make the fluffy ply stand out and spiral around. I put in my best effort, and got about 324 yards of 2-ply, in a heavy worsted weight. I had some of the merino/silk skinny single leftover, so I plied it back to itself and got about 64 yards of sport-weight 2-ply.
This one is the all-skinny 2-ply:
Next up: Midnight in Gallifrey
Last May I bought two pounds of super-soft blue-black roving at the New Hampshire Sheep & Wool Festival, with plans to spin a sweater’s worth of yarn. It is a 65% wool, 25% alpaca, 13% silk blend from Gurdy Run Woolen Mill.
I’d spun a bit of it using my old (only) style, and the resulting yarn was skinny and harsh. After a lesson from spinning friends, I’m able to spin a loftier/softer yarn — I’ve finished two big skeins of it so far — it’s turning out as a heavy DK/light worsted. I plan to use Amy Herzog’s Custom Fit application to design the perfect sweater for my non-standardized handspun yarn.
Next up: Mad Color BFL
Another purchase from NHSW: a braid of roving from Mad Color Fiber Arts. The “cowgirl” colorway seemed like it might be suited to some gradient spinning … something I really wanted to try.
I split the entire braid in half, then split each half lengthwise. I spin white to black to white for each half, then plied them together. While plying the color changes were staggered a bit, so there is some barber-pole effect at the transitions. I kinda like how it helps the colors blend. I ended up with about 280 yards of roughly sport-weight yarn.
It’s pretty skeined, but it’s even better caked!
Last but not Least: Re-Plies
One important bit of feedback from the spinning circle was that my yarn was “overspun and underplied.” I decided to run several skeins through the wheel again, just to ply them a bit more. I was happily surprised that the resulting yarn was MUCH MORE like real yarn — plush instead of harsh, coherent instead of stringy. Here are some “before and after” shots…
Long Island Livestock Llama
Long Island Livestock Mystery Blend
replying your skeins changed them completely. now I am wondering if some of my not so great skeins might look a little better if I add some extra ply. thanks for sharing with us.
I know! It was like a miracle. Now I actually like some of that early yarn! 🙂 Let me know if it works for your yarn too ….