Tag Archives: merino

Undyed Stuff

My work tends to get the most attention when it’s bright and loud and saturated with color. I know in most cases, that’s what the Tiny Dino Studios brand is known for. I also happen to really love working with natural fibers and fibers from different breeds. Knowing there different fleece characteristics across different breeds and then actually exploring some of those differences for myself are two very different things.

I have my comfort zone wools for spinning, Falkland in any form, and Merino I like, but as long as it’s not top (because I am picky.) Alpaca is fun and different. And just generic American Wool is fun and durable and soft. This is what I spin most often because it’s what the people around me produce or sell, so it’s easy to come by. But I have been trying to branch out a bit.

I’ve been working through some Cormo, which is lovely to spin. It’s soft, but not so soft it doesn’t have any durability. It’s my favorite parts of Corriedale with the best parts of Merino thrown in. Then, I received my Tunis roving back from the mill. Tunis is a little coarser, and you can feel the difference between a mediumwool sheep and a finewool sheep when you hold a skein of Cormo in one hand and a skein of Tunis in the other. And yet, they are both soft. Perhaps it’s just the way I spun it (worsted, chain-plied, heavy fingering weight) but I can hold it up to my neck and it doesn’t prickle. And though it has less crimp than the Cormo, the Tunis feels distinctly springy–like it’s got the energy to paint the town red while the Cormo wants to eat bon-bons while reclining on a silk settee.

The color is vastly different as well. Tunis is known as a red sheep, and while the wool is not actually red, it has a peachy, kind of antiqued white color to it.

Tunis_Handspun_Yarn
It’s hard to see on it’s own. In this photo (which is too bright, I will give you) the skein just kind of looks to me like a skein of springy undyed wool.

But when you sit it next to the Cormo, you can really see the difference.
Tunis_next_to_cormo
The Tunis is on the left. The Cormo is on the right. Please study carefully, there will be an exam.

Then, I received this in the mail yesterday:
Rambouillet_Lock

That is a lock of Rambouillet. I purchased a 10 oz bag on Etsy last week and it is gorgeous. As you can tell from the veg matter in the photo, this lock is unwashed–unwashed! Look how gorgeously white and crimpy that is! I am very excited. This is possibly the softest lock I have held in my hand ever. And the locks were so beautiful, I couldn’t quite bring myself to break them up by throwing them in a big tub to soak.

washingwool
To keep the lock integrity as much as possible, I am using the Yarn Harlot’s method for stove top wool washing.

Updates when it’s clean!

Second plied yarn of the year

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This is the first skein of yarn from Shale’s 2012 fleeces. She’s BFL and a wee smidge of merino, camel, and silk were blended in. I’m spinning a 3-ply yarn as is my usual wont and it’s fluffed up just beautifully after a soak and a thwack.

Plied

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I’ve been steadily plying yarn this week . Pictured above is the skein from the Romney rainbow batt, the Spunky Electic merino/angora in Juniper, and another skein of BFL/alpaca to add to the growing pile.

Caption Contest Winner!


Wow, the deliberations were intense.  So many great captions... only one winner.  After numerous ballots with sweat and tears, Candi emerged as the winner with her funny caption submitted on Facebook:


Not sure how well Candi knows Boaz, but that sentiment is spot on.  Boaz loves to get in your face.  I was actually backing up when I took that photo to keep him from getting paca snot on the camera.

Candi - you get to choose from our new yarns, fresh out of the dye pots.  We have three different yarns, in several colors each.  These colors are approximate - I'm not good at making my camera get the exact right color.  Good luck picking your favorite skein  ;-)

Shalom - 100% Fine Superwash Merino yarn, 4 oz. ~190 yards:

Top: Cardinal and Third Watch
Bottom: Sprouts, Harvest, Lupine


Shepherd's Keep - 100% Organic Merino yarn, 4 oz. ~280 yards:

Primrose
Evensong

Jacob's Well
Wake Up! (Bright yellow)
Robin's Egg
Thicket (Spruce)



Bounty - 86% Brushed Kid Mohair, 14% Nylon, 4 oz. ~496 yards:

Prairie Rose

Sunrise
Mustard Seed
Deep Valley (shades of olive, brown, rust)

We'll also be offering in the LRB Store, several natural colored cotton yarns for warm weather projects.  Drop on by for a look-see soon...

I'm already looking ahead to Saturday - it's the Third Saturday Spin/Knit In at the LRB!  Hope you can be with us...  And Farm Camp begins on Monday!  Now that's going to be a big time...

Flower are coming

005 honeysuckle buds 011

Despite the crazy warm winter, it looks like my daffodils are right on time for a mid-March bloom. The honeysuckle is all set to take over the world and other garden beauties are not far behind. Meanwhile I have that lovely red braid from SPA already on the wheel. It’s a merino/nylon blend probably meant for socks but I am undecided if I will use it that way since it’ll need to be a two-ply judging by the thickness of my singles. I have yet to spin fine enough for a 3 or 4 ply sock yarn but I’m sure I”ll get there. Perhaps I need to try out that lace flyer sitting patiently in my spinning bag.