This is not about crafting things for an emergency, this is about having to wait in the car for a half-hour, and despite my best intentions I still have not squirreled away a small spindle and fiber about my person, and I was getting fidgety. My oldest handed me a fast food napkin. I tore it into strips and twined it. Ah. Better. We almost always have a stash of napkins in the car, and the resulting twine is surprisingly robust, for a short stapled fiber stuck together with starch. So there we go, fidgets fidgeted with readily available materials.
Twine made from a paper napkin (the pin is to keep if from unraveling until I get back to it)
This phrase goes through my head often lately. Wonder why.
Singles spun of BFL/silk blend (and the start of two-plying because I ran out of roving mid-walk)
My balsam-colored Blue-Faced Leicester and silk blend spinning is done. Spun and plied entirely during walks around the neighborhood. Ok, well except for getting the cop started and detangling, which were more efficiently done sitting at home. I have a plan for this yarn, but it involves knitting, which is not my favorite, so may take awhile (to get started and to finish). Plans change, though, so maybe another possibility will present itself in the meantime.
Two-ply hand spun BFL/silk (with sticky notes rolled for the centers and marked with the date it was spun and plied)
As I was contemplating what to make with the mini balls of test alpaca that I spun, my youngest announced that her other doll needed a new jacket. Ok, that can be done. I chose to nålbind (because I like it best) and used a Finish 2 + 2 stitch with an F2 connection. Because the three skeins were different colors, I decided to put the darkest in the center. I also tried a different construction technique, working in vertical rounds, rather than horizontal. Making the neck and front slit was just a matter of chaining along, rather than connecting, as long as I needed.
Doll vest before cutting
Once I had the sides of the vest even, I cut the bottom, pulled out the loose threads, and tightened and wove in the attached ends. I then sewed up a section of each side to form the arm holes but leave side slits.
Bottom edge neatened (I like the scallops), and sides sewnBack of doll vest showing all three preparations of yarn
Really there was no difference in the three preparations of fiber after the initial single spinning. Even the finished fabric just has color variations, but is otherwise consistent in texture.
Front of doll vest
This was an excellent test. The alpaca yarn combined with this stitch made a very dense fabric. I think a human-sized version would be quite heavy.
I had a panic moment. My spinning and walking is going well, and my speed is improving, and I realized that once I was done with the current preparation of fiber I didn’t have anything ready to spin. The horror!!
So I washed up some more alpaca fiber, this time using the utility sink and some netting, rather than bowls and towels. Since alpaca does not have heavy lanolin to scour away, I was not concerned about the wash water going down the drain. It was much like washing a dog. To keep the fibers out of the drain, I used a section of netting, which also helped squeeze out the water gently to avoid felting the fleece. I used Amway LOC liquid soap and rinsed each section three times. So much dirt. I laid each section out to dry on my hanging circular trays. There is still some vegetable matter (VM) in the fleece, but I am planning on picking and carding most of that out. I figure the evening activity will be carding and then I can spin in the morning.
Part of Aimee’s fleece after rinsing
I washed the last of Donna Bella’s fleece, and about half each of Sugar Plum’s and Aimee’s. I have five trays full of fiber. That should get me through the summer! Maybe longer.
I love Spin-off magazine, but it does send me down rabbit holes! After reading an article, I usually look up the author’s blog, which is almost always full of more interesting things. Melvenea Hodges of traditionsincloth.com had a lovely shawl pattern in the magazine, then in her blog talked about spinning cotton directly onto little wooden spools. Well, of course I had to try. I did not have any spools that fit my tahkli spindle (yet), so I took an empty spool and used rubber bands to hold it in place on the button whorl (reaching new Frankenstein levels here). I’m not spinning gorgeously prepared cotton sliver (as far as I can tell, cotton sliver is similar in appearance to wool roving, anyway, it is prepped fiber ready to spin), in fact, I’m spinning cotton packaging from vitamin bottles, but the spool idea is fabulous. Enough so, that obtaining some prepped cotton and making some proper spools is tempting. Maybe after practicing some more with the bonus stuff.
Using a thread spool to hold the spun cotton singles (not my idea)