My single spun mint top fiber has been sitting on my drop spindle for awhile. I spun it so thin I really was worried about it breaking during the plying process. I finally took a deep breath, got out my homemade spindle holder, and chain plied with my vintage Befra Willy spinning wheel.
Photo description: oak stand with drop spindle full of single spun mint top fiber which is a cellulose fiber infused with mintPhoto description: Befra Willy flyer and bobbin with three-ply mint infused yarnPhoto description: three ply yarn wrapped onto a PVC niddy noddy
I wet the yarn on the niddy noddy to set the twist. I’m still not feeling and “coolness” from the mint infused fibers. Maybe that will come once the yarn is made into fabric?
I’ve posted before about Howard Feed-n-Wax and how much I love it for the ease of use and beauty it imparts to wood. Here is another testimonial with my Befra Willy Spinning Wheel.
Photo description: Befra Willy spinning wheel before application, showing the wheel functional, but the finish is dullPhoto description: same spinning wheel after application of Howard Feed-n-Wax, the color deepened to a rich brown, the grain of the wood is more evident, and there is pleasant shine
I did replace the hooks on the flyer assembly as well. They weren’t broken, but I have an idea about how to wind the spun yarn more smoothly and larger hooks may help. More on that later.
Photo description: new hooks on the flyer assembly, old smaller hooks on the counter
I finally combed and single spun the last of an alpaca fleece that I purchased and washed in 2020, and started spinning on my Befra Willy Spinning Wheel in 2022. I haven’t been spinning consistently over the last two years; there were many months that the fleece and the wheel were tucked away out of sight and definitely out of mind.
Photo description: Befra Willy Spinning Wheel with a bobbin full of single spun fawn colored alpaca fiber
To free up my bobbin, because the next step is to give the wheel some TLC, I wound the yarn into a cake using my wool winder. I ended up with 196g of spun alpaca (the cardboard tube in the middle weighs 4g).
Photo description: cake of single spun alpaca fiber sitting on a scale reading 200g
I put the cardboard tube in to keep the yarn under more tension. Single spun yarn is not balanced, and I wanted to reduce the chance of kinks and tangles. I’m not sure how I want to ply this fiber, so it will sit until I have an idea. I did pull the start of the yarn and the end to compare thickness, and I did a fair job keeping a consistent spin over the two year span. There are some thinner and thicker sections, but not a wide spread.
Photo description: yarn pulled from the center (newest) and the outside (oldest) showing very similar thicknesses
This definitely counts as a forever project. I’m really getting my crafting money’s worth from this alpaca fleece.
I’m still working on spinning the fawn-colored alpaca wool on my vintage Befra Willy spinning wheel. I’d like to get it finished up so I can give the wheel a good rub down with Howard’s Feed-n-wax, but apparently my fiber basket is bottomless. (Or I get distracted…)
Today’s distraction is an evenly wrapped bobbin. There are all sorts of devices out there designed to achieve a smooth wrap, rather than the bumpy wrap produced by the hooks on the flyer. A smoothly wrapped bobbin makes taking the yarn off the bobbin easier, with less potential for breakage.
I’ve been thinking on this, and noticed that I can turn my hooks and get a slightly different take up angle on the flyer. This helps a little, and if I did this from the beginning I would certainly be closer to that epitome of bobbin wrapping that seems to be so coveted.
Photo description: closeup of a flyer mechanism on a Befra Willy vintage spinning wheel, with light fawn colored alpaca single wrapped around the bobbin and going through the hooks on the flyer. One hook is turned sideways. The yarn wound on the bobbin is thicker near the hooks, resulting in bumps.
I pulled out my spinning wheel and realized that it has been a long time since I spun with it. Thor the cat has never seen it in action and he is nine months old. Hm. He was quite fascinated with the process, and after this photo had to be told to knock it off as he went for the wheel and the yarn.
Photo description: Gray tabby looking at a vintage wooden Befra Willy Spinning wheel, specifically at the yarn coming from the orifice.