The next breed of sheep is the Llanwenog, a welsh breed of sheep belonging to the Welsh Hill and Mountain family. Developed in the late 1800's from the now-extinct Llanllwni (the local black-faced sheep of the western coastal counties of Wales and named for the mountain they lived on), Shropshires, Welsh Mountain and Clun Forest breeds. According to the British Wool Marketing Board the breed was established in the UK during the 19th century.
The Llanwenog is a medium build sheep with a blackface and black legs and a distinctive tuft of wool on its forehead between its short thin ears. Neither sexes have horns
They produce a medium size white fleece of around 2 - 2.5kg and the staple length is 2 to 4.5 inches (5 to 11.5cm). The shorter fibres in the fleece can be carded but this is a fleece that is best combed and spun worsted to show off its lustre, shine and sleek qualities. It can be spun from opened locks. This fleece takes dye well.
Yarns spun from Llanwenog fleece are quite soft with good stitch definition and can be used for whatever you want to make.
I had 262g of washed white fleece which, once combed, became 150g of hand combed top |
I lost 10g somewhere because my skeins total 140g/418m of sport weight yarn |
The "w" in the middle looks a bit weird but it is there and is perfectly formed |
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