Thursday, 11 June 2020

A Big Experiment

Back on 6th June I announced on my Facebook page I was combing some Jacob fleece in preparation for a large spinning job. The first part of the fleece was combed back in March and was the darker grey fibres of the fleece and I got 183g of combed fibre from it. The second part of the fleece was combed at the beginning of June and was the lighter grey fibres of the fleece but I selected the darkest of these fibres in the first instance so that I could make the bag of darker fibres up to a nice round 200g and the lighter grey fibres produced about 320g of combed fibre. Keep reading to discover my reasoning for doing that.

I've made no secret of my dislike of a couple of the fibre braids from the monthly fibre club that I was once part of. I did ask other members of the group if anyone wanted to buy the braids from me on the sale/trade page but despite several of them saying previously that they loved the colours of these braids there were no takers for my braids of fibre. I brushed it off the cold shoulder and I came up with the idea of spinning it in a similar way to a yarn I spun way back in 2013, the last skein in this post but this time using grey rather than black.

Now, the reason for me wanting to make the dark fibre bag up too 200g is because if I add that amount to one of the 100g of braids it makes 300g and then I have about 320g in the other bag with the light grey fibres and these two amounts will make two separate plies to then be spun together. So this would give me a total of around 600g broken down into 6 skeins of approximately 100g each with a fibre content of approximately 66% Jacob wool/34% Merino wool.


I split the braid up into 6 equal parts and then the dark grey into 6 equal parts and put each set into their own little bag. I then took one bag and broke the two lots of fibres down even further into the same number of little bumps, although the dark grey bumps were twice the weight of the rainbow bumps. I then spun it finely one part rainbow followed by two parts grey, rainbow, grey, rainbow, grey, rainbow... and this made one ply.

The light grey I didn't split up or weigh out into 6 parts as this will make up the other ply and I will just use it with each 100g of the grey/rainbow mix until it runs out and it makes for a very interesting barber-pole effect even in just the grey on grey sections.

I've not finished this spinning project yet but I have spun two skeins so far, each approx 100g, but the heat got the better of me last week and I felt it was too hot to be handling fluffy fibres that could felt in my hot hands.

I have another 4 skeins worth to spin and I am surprised by how much I like it. Its not nowhere near as garish as I thought it would be when I planned the project with the view of over-dying it blue, in the knowledge of how the blue dye would react with the original colours so the grey Jacob would become mottled and the yellows would become green, the pinks would become purple etc etc just like mixing paint. I need to do a bit of a test knit to see how it knits up before I decide whether to over-dye it blue or not. It may be that I decide to over-dye half of it blue and leave half as it is as this would supply me with enough yarn in each colourway to make something substantial.

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