Dividing the last

I spun up nearly a whole bag of alpaca/merino roving, filled up six small bobbins of singles, and two large bobbins of three ply yarn. The roving that remained was not enough to fill three more small bobbins, so I weighed it and divided by three.

Photo description: “rose hip” dyed alpaca and merino roving divided up into three roughly equal parts and put back in the bag, separated by clips. Ashford Traveller spinning wheel in the background with left over single spun yarn on the bobbins.

Dividing the roving worked well, but I still had one bobbin run out of single spun before the other two when I was plying. To use up all the singles, I chain plied the last bits. Since chain plying creates a slightly different yarn than plying from three bobbins (there are U bends in the yarn, but it is still three ply), I knit up my swatch with this last bit of yarn. So I didn’t loose track of which part was chain plied, I knit straight off the spinning wheel. The yarn was nicely balanced, so this wasn’t difficult.

Photo description: knitting a moss stitch swatch straight off the spinning wheel

My spinning and plying created a “bulky” yarn, about 8 wraps per inch (wpi), so I knit with size 11 needles by Prym.

Jumbo flyer

The new-to-me Ashford Traveller spinning wheel came with a jumbo flyer that hadn’t been assembled. I finished all the wood parts with Howard’s Feed-n-Wax. (See? I love this stuff.) Ashford wood products typically come unfinished.

Photo description: Ashford jumbo flyer with sliding hooks and two bobbins, the whorl (bottom right) has had an application of Feed-n-Wax

After a few applications and some drying time, I finished the assembly by screwing in hooks and tried it out on the spinning wheel to ply my three singles. It occurred to me that three full bobbins will not all fit on a single bobbin of the same size, but a jumbo bobbin could hold it all. The flyer came with a new end bracket to fit the larger end of the flyer, but it also came with grommets to fit the original flyer so I don’t have to change the bracket to switch back and forth. Nice.

Photo description: jumbo bobbin and flyer mounted on an Ashford Traveller, bobbin is half full of three plied yarn
Photo description: to ply, I hold the single spun yarn leading from the lazy kate bobbins between my fingers to keep tension between my hand and the flyer orifice. This keeps the pigtails of twisted yarn from catching in the ply.
Photo description: jumbo bobbin full of three ply alpaca merino yarn

The jumbo flyer is marketed as an aid to make bulky art yarn, but I think it does a lovely job of plying as well.

Just keep spinning

I’m developing my skills with the Ashford Traveller spinning wheel. I’ve found it helps me evenly distribute the yarn on the bobbin if I separate up my roving into thinner strips and switch hooks on the flyer after I spin each strip.

Photo description: four strips of roving laid out on my knee as I prepare to spin

Some spinners pre-draft their roving to make spinning easier, I find tearing off about 8-10 inches, then separating out sections has a similar function. Commercial roving is quite thick, and when spinning directly from a large bundle of fiber there is a tendency for the fibers to tangle, making it harder to spin consistently. Joining in a new strip is easier for me than untangling a mess of looped fibers, or managing a thick bundle.

Photo description: Ashford Traveller built-in Lazy Kate holding three evenly filled bobbins of single spun yarn

I now have three full bobbins of yarn and am ready to try plying with the wheel!

So this is love

Knitting black yarn with black needles, oh my. I didn’t start off with this plan. I bought hand dyed eclipse themed yarn because it had my eldest’s favorite colors, then I had to get the smallest Prym needles, which only come in black. I get respite when the yellows and oranges pass over the needles, but the black on black stitches are done mostly by feel. This is my current forever project, because I can only knit during the daylight, and can’t be sleepy or have any alcohol when I’m working on it.

Photo description: black, orange, and yellow yarn knitted on black needles, sock in progress, toe up

There is a persistent meme in the crafting world that you only knit black yarn for those you love because the stuff is so hard to see.

More socks

As a comparison to yesterday’s throwback post, here is my latest pair of socks finished. These are women’s size 5 socks knitted from fingering weight variegated super-wash merino wool and nylon yarn. I knitted them at the same time with two circular needles, which I much prefer over double pointed needles. They were knitted toe-up, which I also prefer, except for binding off. I tore out and reknit the top of one sock three times trying to get a stretchy bind-off. I ended up with a tubular bind-off, which is like a Kitchener grafting stitch, and goes well with 1×1 ribbing. I don’t care for the heel construction on these; I didn’t grasp the way to pick up stitches that were wrapped on the short rows. The good news is that there are dozens of different ways to do heels.

Photo description: two blue and yellow variegated knit socks, the right one laid flat showing the top of the foot and ankle, the left folded to show the bottom of the foot and heel.

My youngest reports that they are quite comfy. I do think hand knit socks are worth the effort for this reason.