Ply comparison

With my spinning experiments I ended up having three different plys of yarn from the same merino fiber, a two ply, a three ply (chain ply). and a four ply (cable ply).

From the top down, two ply, three ply, and four ply yarn from similar sized single ply (calico cat background)

I still don’t think the cable ply has enough twist, and I have trouble telling the two ply from the three, but it was an interesting experiment. Now, what to do with these wee balls of yarn?

Unusual perspective

Hens eating grubblies

I was out in the coop because I needed some reference photos of the hens for a graphic project (results are on my other blog, here). This shot didn’t help with the drawing, but I liked the composition and unusual angle.

Cabled yarn

So exciting! Another way to ply! I was scrolling through a spinner’s group and found reference to cable plying, in which you take a two ply yarn and ply it again with two strands to get a four strand yarn. I had an extra cop of two ply that I could easily use to try the technique. I was able to ply from both ends of the cop (inside and outside ends), just as I did for the first round of plying. As a bonus, I’m almost positive that I can walk and do this! (I was way too enthused about it to wait until daylight, so finished the plying just standing inside). I definitely need practice, however, I’m not sure I added enough twist.

Two-ply cop being plied into a four-ply yarn

The most exciting thing is that this makes my fiber last for more walks! Spinning, plying, then plying again!

Egg transparency

We found another shell-less egg in a nest box. My youngest was helping so I held the fragile egg and a normal egg up to the light, and she took a picture, because it was neat to see the transparency of the odd egg. I say the egg was shell-less, but it did have a very thin layer of hardened material, then a thick membrane. Touching it caused a dent, but then gently rolling it in my fingers didn’t break the egg and made it look more like a fluid-filled latex balloon. I weighed it and recorded it in the book, then we gave it to the dogs. Griffin was quite surprised when he picked up the egg and left most of it behind! Missy didn’t mind cleaning up.

Shell-less egg compared to a normal egg in the light

Standing chain ply

I say “standing” because it will take more practice before I can walk and chain ply. Chain plying is a way to make a three-ply yarn from one single, much like making a foundation chain in crochet with very long loops. If my single ply is supported I like to make loops as long as my arms can reach, but if I’m holding the source yarn in one hand and the spindle in the other, I have to shorten the loops to maybe half an arm span. And it takes more concentration to keep the three strands under tension and unkinked, so standing (with an occasional ball kick) is about all I can currently manage.

Missy is helping me practice chain plying by providing footwork