Over the holidays, I did a bunch of spinning. The small orangey skein is some pumpkin coloured fibre I spun a while back. There wasn't a lot of it as I was just playing with colours, so the skein is small. The white is Merino, very fine and very soft. It was the end of some sliver that was leftover from another project. Most of this was spun with a long draw. I really should have carded it first, as the sliver and fibre was old and a bit compacted in places. The resulting yarn is a bit uneven in places, but still soft, springy and will make awesome mitts or a hat.
I've started into a bag of grey superwash merino. I'm guessing there was about 100 g or so, but I didn't weigh it first. This is the second bobbin and I'll be ready to ply it soon. It's rather nice because the colour is a bit variegated and interesting to both spin and look at.
The guild is looking for ideas for an upcoming class. We have had suggestions of pin weaving jewellery, cute woven buttons and stick weaving. Here is my contribution to ideas, which is a coiled basket. If it were in the late summer or early autumn, I'd have used either ditch lily leaves to make cording or tried to find a bale of Timothy hay, which would also work well. However, they are wet project materials and ours needs to be dry, so I used para-cord for this one. I had this small 1/4 in size on hand for this sample. I tried most of the feed stores and hardware stores locally but I couldn't find larger hemp or even jute rope around anywhere. I have a larger poly braided cord to do another sample at some point. This little basket took about 3 1/2 hours to finish.
I've dressed the loom with a wool warp in a simple herringbone twill. It will become a blanket. Because it's a twill and I only have 4 shafts to work with, I'm doing the blanket in halves and will join it in the middle. The red stripe was a second choice. My first was a lighter blue, but it turned the other colours were just a tad thicker in grist. It felt odd as I was winding the warp and it was easier to just switch out the colour that try to figure out if it would work as is, or did I need a different sett. This is a couch blanket for cooler evenings and for the kitties to sleep on.
Your yarns always look so good.
ReplyDeleteLove the basket! Does it hold it's shape well with the paracord?
The blanket in progress looks good too. I'd probably have wanted the light blue too, but the red is perfect for the holiday season.
The paracord holds it's shape quite well. I think part of that is because the securing stitches in the coiling technique are fairly close together, giving it stability. When I did this with Timothy hay, the rigidity of the hay bundles didn't need stitches quite as close.
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