Dividing yarn: subtractive method

I found painted yarn at my local yarn shop! This yarn is self striping by having a precise color repeat. I don’t need my socks to be identical, but I don’t like knitting two socks from the same ball because of tangle and twist issues, so I divided it in two using a scale and a ball winder.

Photo description: Printed yarn by Cascade with 51g on the scale, and 51g on the winder

I place the full amount of yarn on a scale to get the total weight, then I wind my yarn into a cake using a Royal wool winder until the scale reads half the original. I cut the yarn, and start a new yarn cake.

Photo description: two equal weight yarn cakes with pretty pastel shades of green, purple, blue, pink, white, and yellow.

It is harder to measure going from skein to cake because the skein is on an umbrella swift and the cake on a ball winder, both clamped to the table, but if you go a little past what you think is half, then weigh the cake, it is easy to wind off back onto the swift.

Different

Photo description: three eggs held in my hand outside the coop, with egg weights digitally added: 45g, 54g, 31g

I found a small egg in the nest boxes. Although it is a different color than the other two eggs collected that day, it is in the normal coloration of my hen’s eggs, just small. I broke it open and there was a yolk (which surprised me), but very little white.

On the tech side of things, I just discovered that my photo app can add actual text now. I’ve been scribbling with markup, or porting to a different app for text adds for years. I’m not sure when that feature slipped in there, but it does help streamline my workflow. Yay!

Shadow’s Embrace

This is hand-dyed yarn by Madeline Tosh. The color-way is named “Shadow’s Embrace”. Yes, it was a special design for today’s eclipse. I bought it through JuJu Knits in Fort Worth, and while I was picking up, saw a sock pattern called “Singularity” by Jeny Staiman.

Photo description: Shadow’s Embrace black and orange super fine weight yarn by Madeline Tosh in the skein.
Photo description: two yarn cakes of roughly equal value wound from the Shadow’s Embrace yarn.

I am totally working on socks today called Singularity Shadow’s Embrace. Makes my nerdy science heart happy!

Puffball?

We had this large mushroom pop up inside our fence. Rather than risk the dogs getting sick, I took my picture and threw it out into the back woods. It was quite heavy for a mushroom. I showed the picture to my eldest, who responded: “Aren’t those edible?” Hm. I looked it up and puffball mushrooms can be edible, but don’t mix them up with earthball mushrooms, which are not edible. One of the ways to tell is to cut it open. Did I do that before I threw it into the woods? Nope, of course not.

Photo description: palm sized round mushroom with a rough white surface.

We’ve had a nice wet Spring. I think I’ll take a knife with me when I go back out into the woods.

Soybean top page

I have finished a new fiber page for my spinning book! I mounted all my samples from hand spinning soybean top (top is the description of the fiber preparation, involves combing, and produces parallel fibers) on prepped black card stock. I would definitely use this fiber again, it is very strong, yet so soft.

Photo description: Soybean top fiber page. Clockwise from top left: original card from Hearthside Fibers reading “Soybean Top Developed in the USA in the 1930s by Henry Ford Used in Ford car upholstery pre-1940”, single spun, 2-ply, and 4 ply yarn samples, woven swatch, nålbinding swatch, crochet swatch, knit swatch, combed fiber.
Photo description: same page with swatches flipped up to show the writing underneath: plain weave on Clover mini loom, nålbinding Dalarna O/U O:U O, crochet 1.75mm hook, Stiockinet size 2 needle knit.