I've been working with the Dorset/Friesian fleece that I was given. It's not a super long staple length, or super soft, but it is long enough mostly just over 3 inches and soft enough to make it fun to work with and really nice to spin. The first step to processing a fleece is washing. I've taken to doing a cold water soak to remove and loosen the dirt before washing with soap, degreaser and hot water to remove the remaining dirt and the lanolin. It's worked beautifully in getting the fleece very clean, using fewer hot water washes and rinses. This is the cold water soak I started earlier today. It's amazing how quickly the dirt starts to soak off. The water is really, dirty now. I'll drain it and wash it tomorrow. After an overnight soak, it should be good to go. I don't want to leave it too long or it will start fermenting. This is good, if it's not in your laundry tub, in the back room of your houseI set up my laundry rack on the deck. I have a roll of fibre glass window screening that I spread over the top bars and spread the fleece out to dry on top of it. If it's breezy, I put another piece of screening over top of it and peg it down with some clothes pegs to keep the fleece from blowing away. A bit of breeze will help it dry quickly, as does using a salad spinner, laundry spinner or even just putting the fleece in a mesh bag and whizzing it around quickly in a circle to extract the extra moisture. It was nice enough out that this dried in a few hours. I did check it part way through and pulled the few damp spots left, to expose them to sunshine and air. It was all dried well before supper time. This was good as I needed to have it for the spinning gathering the next day.
Anyway, much of the VM falls out while carding or pulling the locks apart before carding. The rest mainly falls out or can be picked out while spinning. The few bits that remain, are just part of the process.
I've been mainly hand carding the fleece. Although it's a little hard on the hands due to repetition and arthritis, it is still a lovely preparation. I've put a bit through a drum carder too, which is faster, but a bit different to spin. The skein is my sample and the bobbin is my next try at a slightly thicker yarn.
Short forward draw, not counting really, but 1 treadle per about a 1 1/2 inch draft.
This is my second sample. I did two full bobbins and plied them together. It's a slightly thicker grist that my first sample and will work for a sweater. I'd planned on dyeing it after spinning as I don't know what colour I want yet. Then today I started second guessing myself, thinking that I should have dyed it in the fleece and carded it together for a more even colour. I'm almost finished another bobbin though, and have the remains of the second one as well, so do I knit a patterned sweater? Maybe a simple fair isle type design? Or do I keep going as I've started. Regardless, it's fun doing. a big project like this with a fleece this nice. I got a bit distracted and a bit burnt out from the Master Spinner class, spending 6 years spinning to class requirement. I've heard this is an issue with a lot of people who do that course. However, having people to spin with again has re-ignited my passion for spinning, which I'm so happy for. Now to find a knitting pattern for my new sweater.
Gosh, that washed fleece looks luscious. The fleeces I currently have are all quite old, so the grease is quite hard. But it's preserved them well! Once the garden slows down in the heat of summer. I hope to have some time to work on them and get back to spinning.
ReplyDelete