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- From: sbowen@gmuvax.gmu.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.crafts.textiles
- Subject: What I Unlearned about Spinning
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.100459.52599@gmuvax.gmu.edu>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 10:04:58 -0500
- Organization: George Mason University, Fairfax, VA.
- Lines: 48
-
-
- This past Monday, I took a spinning tutorial with my friend and local
- spinning instructor, Karl. His approach is to teach production spinning and
- leave historical accuracy to the authenticity police. He also noted that
- his approach is also somewhat historically accurate because people back then
- *HAD* to spin for production.
-
- The upshot was that he exploded several myths about spinning for me and I
- thought I should share them.
-
- Myth 1 - The two hands work together to produce a drafting triangle.
-
- Actually, the drafting triangle is the responsibility of the right hand
- and is formed by how hard you pull on your fiber as the yarn forms. The
- left hand works almost independently, twisting the lumps and stray fibers
- into the yarn.
-
- Myth 2 - Treadle slowly and evenly.
-
- Yes, treadle evenly but to spin fast, treadle FAST. Karl was treadling so
- fast that the drive band (I think it was the drive band) was buzzing and
- the spokes of the wheel were a blur.
-
- Myth 3 - The drafting triangle needs help from the right hand being formed.
-
- If the fiber prep was done well, the drafting triangle will form of it's
- own free will. Occasionally, you have to coax fibers into it by using your
- fingers to press the fiber gently toward it but, for the most part, the
- twist building in the yarn will naturally snag what you hold in your hand.
-
- Myth 4 - Too much twist is bad.
-
- Karl memtioned that by the time you wash the yarn to set the twist, ply
- the yarn, then knit or weave the yarn, over-twist is a disappearing issue.
- Ideally, the yarn should leap into two-ply twists when you move your hand
- with the fiber toward the flyer.
-
- (Note: A drafting triangle is a triangle of fiber formed between the
- unspun fiber and the spun yarn.)
-
- IMHO, I now can spin ~ 50% faster and even produce thinner yarn,
- which is important for feeding a knitting machine. But I am also working
- on an ancient Ashford with very low ratios.
-
- Happy Spinning,
-
- Sue
- sbowen@gmuvax.gmu.edu
-