Sunday, March 30, 2014

Ombre Inspired Spinning

Sweet Georgia Yarns January 2014 Fibre Club is a BFL (75%) and Silk (25%) with a dramatic colourway called Night Owl. Having had success previously with making an ombre inspired yarn, I decided to do the same with this rather than risk the yellows and purples colliding to make mud.

So like before, I separated all the colours into piles and with my hand carders made these luxurious rolags. With 25% silk, they are easy to card and the colours blend perfectly. After I finished all the carding, I put them into an order that I think slowly moved from one colour to the next.

The plan is to spin these very fine and Navajo (chain ply) them, making a three-ply yarn. I started spinning these yesterday and am well over third of the way through it. Will hopefully get the rest of it done this weekend.

Will certainly share the results.


Making Funky Rolags -- Fibres West 2014 Spindling Classes


Last Friday and Saturday morning, I was completely immersed in teaching spindle spinning. Friday morning I worked with beginners. Saturday morning was with a slightly more advanced group of spindlers. It was all great fun.

I love the joy on people's faces when things fall into place and all of a sudden -- they get it! They can make yarn. They understand the rhythm between the spin on the spindle and the amount of fibre that needs to be drafted to keep the spindle spinning and giving the twist a place to go.

The classes are four hours each. Four hours is just enough time when you are working with beginners - but it is too long for the advanced group. This is because the advanced group can spin right from the first moment of the class. At about the 2 1/2 hour mark, arms and shoulders are sore, and people need a break from spinning.

So to accommodate that I introduced a new activity - making funky rolags. Using simple tools like hand cards, we blended dyed rovings with tussah silk, Fire Star, silk noils and Soffsilk. Below are the 5 gram packets of dyed silk noil that was included in the materials kit.


Result is a multi-textured rolag that you spin up. This two-ply yarn (65 yards, 60 metres) was the result of eight rolags. It is difficult to make them exact, but if you use the similar amounts of base fibre colours and the same embellishments, it will all work together giving you a funky yarn.


This activity gave everyone a break from spinning and gave them the chance to practice or even learn a new skill of blending fibre on hand cards. We each made up a bunch of rolags and then returned to spinning to see what kind of yarn they would make.

I love the look of this yarn and how easy it is to make on hand carders. I think I'll be making a lot more yarn like this in the future.