Really, really delayed follow up


Do you all remember that funky yarn I spun, way before Christmas? It looked like this (because this is it):

It’s a two ply yarn. One of the singles has Tuscany’s lovely white fiber as a base, with just a touch of blue that I added as I spun. The other single is the same, only the base is Brittany’s strong black fiber. It was designed by the person who ordered it in August. Well, some time passed. Months, actually. Then, a few weeks before Christmas, we were able to deliver the finished product.

Mom knit both the hat and scarf, using my handspun and white baby alpaca boucle yarn. The white yarn has little curls and is soft, soft, soft. It brings out the white in the handspun, and keeps the whole ensemble from being too dark.

So, thanks Patty! You are rocking that look! Next time, you just need to be more insistent, and we’ll get it done faster.

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Snow day!


Two and half feet of snow really make it hard to get some exercise, if you are a horse or an alpaca, unless you have very clever parents. All the animals were going a bit stir crazy (which can get downright dangerous), so Mom and Dad innovated!

What I like most about this picture is Heidi in the background going "What are you doing over there?!"

Dad went in a circle around the arena, snowblowing a wide path. Then Mom sprinkled hay all around it and viola! We have a race track.

That solved one problem, now what about the alpacas? Dad just made a wide path right up the center of the “exercise paddock”, and let ’em loose.

Be free! Go forth! I love how they look at the snow like it might be different OUTSIDE their pen from how it is inside.

Not surprisingly, Mikayla and Marsy just are not into the fluffy white stuff. It might mess up their hair. But our most playful and sweet alpaca, Tulip, loves it nearly as much as she loves the sprinkler!

Oh yeah, that's the stuff. Gotta roll in that.

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Our best seller


Can anyone guess what our best-selling yarn is?

Studded snows! Which is appropriate, since we just had a foot and a half of snow at the ranch. We’re half-finished with the spinning on another order, and we have enough for Mom to start on the knitting.

Because of the snow, I worked from home on Friday. It was fun, but if I didn’t go to the office, I’d never talk to anyone. Well, anyone human.

Also, the pitiful “why aren’t you paying more attention to me?” face would eventually melt me into a helpless puddle of goo.

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Cabled yarn: complete!


My first cabled yarn is done! It did take a while, as I anticipated, but I like the finished product. You’ll remember from an earlier post that I had already spun a two-ply yarn that I intended to ply again with another two-ply yarn for a total of four plies. Before I could do that, I had to send the yarn through the wheel again, so that it had enough twist. A funny thing happens when you re-twist an already finished yarn.

In each picture, the yarn on the left is the finished yarn, before I added more twist. On the right is the same yarn, after I have added twist. The extra twist dramatically alters the yarn. Not only does it twist up on itself like a single would, it has a much smaller diameter and much less loft.

The yarn holds that almost beaded texture, even after you ply the two over-twisted yarns together to get the finished product.

It’s official: I love cabled yarns. They have a lovely roundness and very clean lines. I can’t wait to see what it looks like in a knitted item!

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When stars align


Doh! I forgot my camera this morning, and I had pictures of my cabling project. Oh well.

Happy Ground Hog’s Day! It’s six more weeks of winter for us. I was looking up the lunar phases, because I cycle through different yoga poses depending on the moon (no, really, I do), and I found out that Ground Hog’s Day is actually a “cross quarter” day, midway between a solstice and an equinox. Specifically, it is imbolc, a day celebrated as the beginning of spring in Celtic tradition. Anyway, even though that has nothing to do with the moon, I’m using it as an elaborate excuse to show off these pictures Dad took.

Even more awesome than the moon rising in the background, just as the sun has set, is that Boogie and Heidi are sharing a food source. Those two are just so happy and relaxed, they seem like entirely different horses from when we were boarding.

Dad took the above picture off the back deck near dawn during the recent lunar eclipse. The sun was rising just as it was reaching full eclipse, so this is actually one of the better shots he could have gotten, especially with the mountains in the background.

So, happy imbolic or Ground Hog’s Day! Happy start of spring or six more weeks of winter! And if you happen to be in the southern hemisphere, happy start of fall!

In any case, take a moment to appreciate that time goes by, that seasons are not all the same, and that our lives are way too short not to stop and watch the moon rise every now and then.

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Retroactive post: Dye Fail


Have you ever tried to dye? Without going into any mental health discussions, I can tell you I’ve tried to dye once. It did not go so well. I think it’s because you need at least a minor in chemistry to understand what’s going on. I know, I know, I have one of those, but I’m really not sure how I achieved it.

There are two basic ingredients required to dye protein fibers (that’s animal). I’ve never tried to dye plant fibers, since obviously alpacas aren’t plants, but I know it’s different. Plant fibers such as cotton, soy silk, and linen are composed primarily of cellulose. Cellulose is the cell wall that protects plant cells. Animal cells don’t have cell walls (I’m a biologist hur dur).

Anyway, to dye protein fibers many people use “acid dyeing” techniques. The acid is a mordant or fixative, it prepares the fiber to accept the dye and makes the finished product colorfast. First, you simmer your fiber in a mild acid such as lemon juice or vinegar for about an hour. Then you rinse most of the mordant out, and simmer your fiber again in a bath of the actual color.

I used mulberries for color and vinegar for my mordant. And maybe it would have worked, except I forgot to do one crucial step. I forgot to separate the locks of fiber completely, so the dye didn’t penetrate to the inside of the staples. So while the mass of fiber on the left looks like it’s been dyed purple, if you look at the stuff on the right, it’s not really very purple. Tulip’s fiber didn’t want to take the dye at all. I’m not even sure what went wrong there.

And that’s why I don’t dye fiber. I’ve decided I can’t be an expert in EVERYTHING and I’m drawing the line at dye. This little experiment was carefully recorded, in excruciating detail, into my fiber notebook. Then I put it all in labelled bags, and stuffed them in the back of the closet, where all fail projects go to die.

Good gracious wordpress! I promise, “dye” is a word. Don’t have a seizure.

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Mom’s new barn cat


The other new kitty is finally out of hiding. Zipporah is much more timid, and not quite friendly, so it took her much longer to get out into the open.

This kitty’s semi-official name when she arrived at the barn was “little black cat”, but Mom has renamed her Zipporah, after Moses’ wife. Mom loves Hebrew names, though ethnically, we’re pretty much as far from Hebrew as you can get. She wanted to name me Miriam, actually.

Both kitties left their home in the grain room for the first time yesterday. The door has been open for a while, but they were pretty comfy in their heated, well-appointed pad.

Whisper explored the hay bales. All cats seem to love hay bales. I think it’s like a larger, more natural climbing tree for them.

The alpacas are apparently not quite sure what they think of the cats. They can see them in the barn, and they don’t really approve, but so far, that’s as much interaction as they’ve had. I hope there are pictures of them meeting each other. I’m sure it will be classic.

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Excuses are like armpits…


…everyone has two of them and they both stink. Somedays, I sit down to write a blog post and I can think of at least three different topics. I should write those ideas down, since there are other days where I can’t think of anything to say at all. Well, that’s not exactly correct. I can think of lots of things to write about, but none of them are relevant.

Since last Monday, I’ve been actively house hunting for my very first home. It’s pretty much the only thing I can think about. Scheming to get the absolute most out of the mortgage, debating renovated vs fixer upper, and trying to decide how much of my life savings I want to spend are all topics I could write novels about, but they have nothing to do with fiber art.

The only overlap between the two topics is in the spare bedroom, which will be my workroom. I’m stupid with excitement over having a space dedicated to spinning and crafting, where I can organize my tools. I’m drooling a little just thinking about it. And it could also be a SPARE BEDROOM, so maybe Mom and Dad will come up and visit more often. That’d be pretty sweet. And I could paint and install wainscotting…and so on.

So, I’m sorry, I have no new pictures or projects to share today. But when I shut my eyes I see paint chips in shades of turquoise. There just doesn’t seem to be room for anything else.

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Cabled yarn: phase one (also, a note on twist)


When we spin thread or yarn, we add twist to loose fiber to lock it together. This twist pulls the fibers closer, and the microscopic scales on the hairs rub against each other, catching and holding. To create beautiful yarn, you must understand twist.

Tulip, then two of Brittany's singles. Spun on my drop spindle, and wound off to the ever classy TP roll spindle.

First we spin the “singles”.  You can actually knit with singles, but they are inherently unbalanced. They twist up on themselves, get tangled easily, and have energy that will change the shape of your finished product. If you knit a square with energetic singles, you end up with a parallelogram. Letting them sit on the bobbin or washing them “sets the twist”, evening it out across all the yarn and locking it in place. I’ve spun nice fat singles from cria wool, washed the skein and dried it stretched out, and ended up with a great yarn, but most spinners ply their yarn.

Preview what the plied product will look like by letting the single twist up on itself.

The amount of twist in your singles determines what your plied yarn will look like. You can preview your finished product by allowing the single to twist up on itself. The more twist you have initially, the tighter your ply will be. I like a tight ply, because looser ply looks rope-y to me. To ply one or more singles, you hold the singles in the hand that normally holds the loose fiber, and you spin the wheel in the OPPOSITE direction. Your goal is to have a balanced yarn when you finish, where the amount of twist you put in to the single while you spun to the RIGHT equals the amount of twist you used when you plied it to the LEFT. Though I check my yarn often as I ply, the moment of truth comes at the end when you are holding the skein. If it hangs in a loose circle, you’ve got balanced yarn, if it twists…fail.

 

Last night I spun and plied the yarn on the left. I intend to ply that finished yarn with the finished yarn on the right, producing a 4-ply cabled yarn. But since both yarns are balanced now, if I just plied them together I’d have an unbalanced yarn that is twisty and hard to work with. Before I can ply them, I actually have to add more twist to both, “respinning” them so that when they are combined they will lay flat. The most important thing to keep track of, other than the amount of twist, is the direction. For this yarn, the direction of spinning will be:

-Spun singles to the right
-Plied to the left
-Re-spun to the left, adding more twist
-Cabled (4 plied) to the right

Do any of those steps in the wrong direction and you either get a tangle, or more likely, the yarn just comes apart in your hands.

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Two-ply: not just for toliet paper


Mom asked me the other day if I ever thought about making a three-ply yarn, instead of my usual two-ply. I said, “Of course. Then I thought about the extra 33.3333333% more fiber we’d have to skirt, pick, wash, card and spin.” I said it nicer than that, obviously, or she’d have knocked some respect into me.

Well. I am a doofus. We often buy colored roving (because I still haven’t figured out how to dye our white roving…oooo….there’s a story there, later). That roving has already been skirted, picked, washed and carded. So all I really have to do is spin it. Sometimes we even buy alpaca yarn. Mom knits faster than we can do all the other steps, so she often goes to friends for yarn from their alpacas. I could actually make three-ply and above yarns just by spinning my usual two-ply and then plying it with existing yarn.

On Knitty.com

This kind of yarn is called “cabled” yarn. It’s durable, which is good since alpaca fiber isn’t, and has a round, clean shape. The lady who made that yarn spun one bobbin full of two-ply white yarn and another of two-ply grey yarn, then she plied them together. Last night I finished making a two-ply grey yarn that I’m planning on cabling with a black yarn. I’ll update you as I experiment with my first cabled yarn; I think we might have to discuss “twist” in more detail as well. I’ve mentioned it in passing, but it’s rather fundamental and probably deserves its own post.

Plus I’m out of time before work! Sometimes, when I parallel park, I’m all like “Bam! Bam! Bam! That’s right, Bertha the land whale is docked. Did you like that, homeless guy?” but usually I’m more like “Two inches forward, two inches back, three inches forward…is that my boss watching me park? How long have I been trying to do this?” Today was one of those mornings, so I’m running 20 minutes of parallel parking late.

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