A Foggy Monday

I’m going to start by telling you that it’s foggy and cold outside today.  Winter seems to have finally come to my little corner of California and that’s fine – because I have a whack-load of plying to do.  In particular, I’m plying this:

That’s the first spindle full of a well-aged batt from AbbysYarns – a blend of merino, silk and firestar (that’s the shiny stuff) called “Elphaba”.  I got two of these batts years ago and, when I needed something to work on while running from Calistoga to Santa Cruz a few weekends ago, this was what I grabbed.

I like to use the same spindle to spin up both plies of a yarn, so I wound off the first batt’s worth onto a cardboard storage bobbin.  I could have wound off onto a racquetball (my good friend Pat turned me on to that idea) but two ounces is a lot to wind off that way and I’ve got lots of cardboard bobbins lying around.  Second batt in progress:

That bobbin in the background is batt number one.  And, the second batt was spun up, I wound it off onto another cardboard bobbin because then I’d be ready to ply.  Almost.  With this yarn, I took one more step – I made a plying bobbin.

Ok, so it’s pretty hard to see – but that’s not a single thread; rather, that’s both singles sitting side-by-side on the bobbin.  I’ve not added any plying twist at all – that’s the next step.  Now, you might be wondering why I go to all this winding and rewinding.  Does it really make a difference?  My answer to that is, “yes.”

Briefly, the benefit of rewinding doesn’t have anything to do with balancing or redistributing twist.  That first winding off from the spindle takes an unevenly wound cop (back and forth on the shaft, small diameter/large diameter) and rewinds it very evenly onto the cardboard bobbin .  Transferring onto the plying bobbin does the same thing but now pairs-up the singles so they’re under the same tension.   My electric bobbin winder make quick work of this, but manual (hand-crank) winders also work fine.  Making a plying ball can also be done on a nostepinne or onto the aforementioned racquetball for portable plying on a spindle.  Toilet paper cores are also great, essentially zero-cost alternative.

So, now that I’m sitting at the wheel, it’s trivial to just add twist.

I’m about half-way through and it’s very fast-going.  Another hour or so and I’ll be finished.  It’s also very easy for me to stop whenever I want without worrying about the singles getting squirrely or wrapping around each other – I just rewind them onto the plying bobbin.  And, my finished yarn is much more evenly plied because I’m not fighting the yarn or pulling unevenly on the singles.  All that work is done.

So if you’re in the mood to experiment, try rewinding your singles into a plying ball (or onto a plying bobbin) before you start adding that last bit of twist.  I’m willing to bet that not only will plying be more enjoyable but your yarn will be better, too.  But now I gotta go – that yarn isn’t going to ply itself.

Posted in Spinning | Comments Off on A Foggy Monday

Getting Back To Work

My elbow continues to heal; slowly and steadily.  I’m doing work with weights to rebuild the muscle (rebuild?  I don’t think there was much there before …) so I thought it was time to get a warp on the AVL.  Something simple but colorful to keep me interested.  I settled on a two-block twill threading with big and small stripes.

I can change the vertical size of the blocks easily; and I can also change from a straight twill to any other four-shaft pattern, so this 18-yard warp will sail by quickly.  I’ve done the first four towels already and it was a joy to be throwing a shuttle again.

But!  I couldn’t stop thinking about the backstrap class and I wanted to cement those learnings by doing something quick – from start to finish so I chose a sensible and useful project:  weaving my own backstrap!  I cut apart a broom handle for loom bars, found an old pillowcase to use as a backstrap, dug up some dowels for shed rods and got busy.  Yarn was stash from previous projects (Takhi Cotton Classic, if you’re curious) and I quickly wound a warp, got it started and then took it along to my weekly meet-up on Thursday afternoon:

I’m almost finished here – but you can see I’m happily clamped to the table and weaving away.  Portable!  Fun!  Useful!  Exactly what I’d hoped.  I finished it up the next day and now it’s waiting to go through it’s trial run:

Two more things and my backstrap kit would be complete.  I made more swords using some maple stock from the woodworking store.  A friend cut out the blanks on his band saw, and then I used a belt sander (clamped upside-down in a vise) to sand down and sharpen the edges.  Finally, a quick going-over with fine-grit sandpaper and voila!  Swords.

I won’t know if they’re good until I use them – but I have more blanks so I can easily make modifications.  Lastly, all those bits and pieces need a home – so I made a bag.

It’s a shoulder bag – very deep with a draw-string closure.  The fabric is a remnant from the bedspreads I made over the winter; the shoulder band one of my early tablet-weaving attempts that ended up too thick for it’s intended purpose and the drawstring my first band from Applesies and Fox Noses.  Perfect use of things I had lying around.  I’m embarrassed to say how many times the seam ripper had to come out to get that box-corner bottom right!  It’s big – maybe too big – but I’ll find out when I use it.  And I want a different band for the drawstring, but I can do that, too.  For now, it’s good enough.

Today it’s grey and rainy – perfect weather to try out my new backstrap and weave up some more towels.  And I’m all set to do just that.

Posted in Sewing, Weaving | 1 Comment