My dream would be if this spun up as a yarn with long colour changes that transitions from one colour to the next as smoothly as possible with as little mudding or barber poling as possible.
I spun from the same end on both singles and when it came to plying the singles it started off good but didn't last. The second braid worked out much better and when I finished plying and compared the skeins in good light I could see that one was predominantly barber-poled with smallish sections of smooth colour and the other braid was the complete opposite. The OCD in me told me to snip out the sections that didn't belong in each skein and swap them over. It took me a while to do this, re-joining the yarn with Russian joins whilst also making sure the colours still flowed as correctly as I could get them to. In total, this took me over a month to complete as there were two large braids and with all the Christmas preparations going on but its not a race, I prefer to take my time and get it right.
The finished skein of yarn above is the one that barber-poled whilst still transitioning from one colour to the next. There is 91g/328m of double knit weight yarn.
The second skein of yarn above is the one that came out as I wanted it to, the colours matching up and no barber-poling whilst still transitioning from one colour to the next. There is 91g/318m of double knit weight yarn.
A side by side view of the two skeins to show the difference between them and the different results you can get, accidental or intentional, from spinning the same colour braids.
These two braids will be used together with some natural white wool to make a pretty shawl that I have been itching to make for a long time.
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