Thursday, July 19, 2007
Persistence or stupidity?
Waaayyy back when The Lord of the Rings was a big movie sensation, several articles came out in Handwoven and/or Spin Off about how the magic cloaks were woven of Gotland fleece. It sounded so wonderful, I ordered one from New Zealand. The description was of a charcoal grey/light grey fleece. It was beautiful. I washed it and was surprised to find that was really a description of the color of the New Zealand dirt. The actual fleece was a very pale grey. (see above). I decided to spin and weave with singles. I carefully calculated the amount of yardage I would need, and spun and spun. I constructed a PVC pipe niddy-noddy so the yarn would be kink-free and easy to warp. In the past, some single yarns have formed little Shirley Temple ringlets as I threaded. I was determined it would not happen this time. So, the spun skeins hung around for a couple of years as I determined that they were really pretty boring, and I didn't think I'd want to weave yardage that dull. Then last summer I went to Penland and learned to paint pretty yarns.. Problem solved.
You'll note that even a nice unkinked steamed yarn reverts to its curly self when wet.
I painted, using the same colorway as the red-ribbon winning scarf. Then I tied on to a previous warp, so as not to waste as much handspun. Then I started weaving.
See all the little threads? Broken and repaired warp threads, dozens of them. It turns out that Gotland is sticky, like mohair. All the constant combing and beating to separate the warp threads (double-sleyed, 20 epi) makes them break, especially if there is a poor join. So I tried hair spray to control the frizz and strengthen the warp.
I painted, using the same colorway as the red-ribbon winning scarf. Then I tied on to a previous warp, so as not to waste as much handspun. Then I started weaving.
See all the little threads? Broken and repaired warp threads, dozens of them. It turns out that Gotland is sticky, like mohair. All the constant combing and beating to separate the warp threads (double-sleyed, 20 epi) makes them break, especially if there is a poor join. So I tried hair spray to control the frizz and strengthen the warp.
Red is nice, too
This was a nice grey coopworth, handspun and handpainted in purples, greens and golds. I think this one is prettier than the blue ribbon winner. And here are some shots of a whole bunch of scarves--some handspun, some just handpainted commercially spun. All are handwoven.
Blue is my favorite color
Blue ribbon, not blue bedspread. This is (was) white handspun corriedale, handpainted and handwoven. The colors are not true on my monitor; they are more autumnal in person. The ribbon was from the Fall Fiber Festival in Montpelier, VA. Last October.