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Penultimate veil update

I have since gotten married, but I have yet to organize my pictures from the wedding.

With less than a month to go, I cast off my veil, washed it, and blocked it. True to the pattern description, I stretched it to six feet in diameter, but the way I wore it prevented it from being a train on the ground, which was good because I didn't want it to get dirty. I will have a last post with it on for my wedding, but that will come later.


I couldn't believe that my entire veil condensed into this sink! I was also surprised that the water changed color. Months of dust in the air did attach to my veil, so I'm glad I washed it out!



My first blocking attempt. It turned out that I needed more blocking mats, so it was more oval than circular. I waited a week for my order to arrive so I could block it correctly.


The final blocking. I still didn't have enough blocking mats, but they served my purpose. You can see more of the detail here. 

Happy knitting!

Journey of wool fibers to hats

I recently bought a spinning wheel, and of course I started spinning with wool! I am still deciding on my style. With my first yarn, I fluctuated between the worsted technique (different from worsted yarn, though I did spin worsted/bulky yarn--weird how the definition changes from knitting to spinning!) and folding the fiber over my finger. Worsted feels more natural to me, but I suppose I will adjust my technique depending on the type of yarn that I want to spin. Perhaps when I am more advanced, I will cringe to read that I used multiple techniques to spin one yarn, but it spun, it's holding together, and I used it to knit. Below is the journey it made:

My brown correidale in a single ply.

Here it is plied with white wool.


Off the wheel and onto the knitty knotty




In a warm bath with wool wash.

Poorly twisted into a skein, but it made me so happy because it looks like yarn!

The two hats that I made from the yarn I spun. They don't look as "professional" as my other hats with commercially made yarn, but they still look fine.

Happy knitting and spinning!

Spinning Bamboo

I am trying to improve the frequency of my posts! I will also include pictures soon.

I bought my first spinning wheel last fall. Like most beginning spinners, I started off with wool. However, a charity that I would like to knit for prefers non-wool hats and scarves. Therefore I decided to try spinning bamboo.

Bamboo is challenging. It has shorter fibers, but they stick together a lot. I think that's what spinners mean when they call it "slippery." Unlike wool, the fibers really seem to go in the same direction and stick together. Sometimes, especially while I'm spinning, I have to pull very hard in order to draft the fibers out.

Starting the bamboo yarn was also challenging. I had tried spinning more loosely with wool to create softer yarn. When I attempted that with bamboo, the yarn kept breaking off and it was difficult to reattach because the fibers were too loose. Then I went to the opposite extreme and spun too tightly, which also caused the yarn to break.

I have experimented with how I hold the yarn and my pre-drafted. Spinning from the fold does work, but my pieces are longer than I am accustomed to with wool, so the thickness of my yarn seems to vary unless I take a very short piece. Another technique I have tried is pre-drafting the bamboo and spinning worsted. That works better for me with consistency, but it sheds on my legs a lot! I have read that shorter fibers do shed more, but this is something else!

I plan to ply it with wool, so hopefully that will prevent shedding in completed knit hats and scarves. I also plan to talk with more advanced spinners about their techniques.

I think, in the future, I will buy acrylic or another fiber to knit with for this charity because I really enjoy the feel of wool while I spin. Perhaps I will change my mind when I am more advanced.

Happy spinning!

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