Yarn

May. 3rd, 2004 06:26 pm
vaneramos: (Default)
[personal profile] vaneramos
I have a rival. At least it's out in the open.

The demonstration at Riverdale Park on Saturday was given by a knitters and spinners guild that Danny [livejournal.com profile] djjo joined recently. We arrived shortly before he was to start knitting at noon, with a few minutes to look around. But one of the organizers quickly spotted him and ushered us into a barn where spinning wheels and other yarn paraphernalia were set up.

Down in the barnyard someone was sheering sheep and bringing up arm loads of raw wool, but it was far from ready for Danny's capable hands.





Yarn is the end product of a labour intensive process. The raw wool is dirty and greasy. It must first be washed. The lanolin oil extracted from it is refined and used in cosmetics. Then the fleece must be disentangled, a process called carding. The old-fashioned way involved large wire brushes. A more recent invention, the carding machine, basically a rolling drum with wire bristles, makes the work easier. Unfortunately it doesn't produce as fine an effect, so smaller carding brushes are sometimes used. Finally, the carded wool is ready to be spun into yarn using the familiar spinning wheel or a smaller, portable tool called a drop spindle. Somewhere in the process the wool may also be dyed, though its natural colours are attractive, too.










You should have seen Danny's eyes light up when someone handed him some freshly spun yarn. He would happily spend the next three hours knitting samples.





About that time I realized I might as well disappear into a graveyard or something.

Date: 2004-05-04 06:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] art-thirst.livejournal.com
I like raw wool but, it IS smelly. I'm so jealous that I never learned more about working with textiles (as an art medium). I've always gotten a thrill looking and touching and, with a knowledge of clothing construction now, I seemed to have let that one slip by me. Maybe there's still time...

There's always time

Date: 2004-05-04 09:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] djjo.livejournal.com
Finding it and using it are the tough things!

I'm just glad I'm still learning things and can become excited by fibre. I joined this group (The Toronto Spinners and Weavers) 3 months ago and it has been AMAZING! It has brought back a lot of enthusiasm that was waning for a while.

Hugs and go fondle some fiber. Make yourself happy! Danny

Date: 2004-05-04 10:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
As a symptom of internalized homophobia, I suppressed my interest in fibre for many years. Starting to work on a quilt was a step forward. Who knows where it will lead?

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