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- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!destroyer!news.itd.umich.edu!vln
- From: vln@icpsr.umich.edu (Victoria Neff)
- Newsgroups: rec.crafts.textiles
- Subject: Re: What I Unlearned about Spinning
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 17:30:30 GMT
- Organization: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research
- Lines: 59
- Message-ID: <1egivmINNfba@terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu>
- References: <1992Nov19.100459.52599@gmuvax.gmu.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: tdis.icpsr.umich.edu
-
- In article <1992Nov19.100459.52599@gmuvax.gmu.edu> sbowen@gmuvax.gmu.edu writes:
- >
- >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.
-
- All right! :-)
-
- >The upshot was that he exploded several myths about spinning for me and I
- >thought I should share them.
-
- Thanks for sharing all these tips with us!
-
- >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.
-
- Well.... Treadle EVENLY (as long as you're not picking out a nep or something,
- that seems reasonable). How fast you treadle is DIRECTLY a result of WHAT
- you are spinning, and what equipment you are using. I noticed one time at
- one of my spinning meetings that EVERYONE was treadling a LOT faster than
- I was. I DO have a tendency to spin too loosely, so I've speeded up a bit.
- However. They were/are mostly using Louets, which have VERY low ratios,
- mostly, and I spin on my LeClerc at 16:1. Each time I treadle, I get about
- double the twist they get for one treadle.
-
- Then there's how thin your yarn is. Thin yarns need more twist, so this
- could affect your treadling speed.
-
- Then there's how fast you can keep up with (hope the grammar police aren't
- looking! :-) )! I can see that "treadle slowly and evenly" could be
- great advice for a beginner.....
-
- >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.
-
- Hmmm. Well, there ARE some very interesting things made from EXTREMELY
- twisted yarns in some old Spin-Offs I have, but you CAN twist the yarn so
- tightly that it's hard and wouldn't be best used for some things (soft scarf,
- say). Generally speaking, I agree that a bit more twist is better. Certainly
- for me -- I like my finished yarns better when I spin them more tightly than I
- think I should as I'm spinning....
-
- (does he really advocate setting twist before plying? I'm curious about this!)
-
- >IMHO, I now can spin ~ 50% faster and even produce thinner yarn,
-
- All right! How exciting! Lucky you, to have such a good teacher available!
- It's certainly a good idea to examine "the rules" in any endeavor from time
- to time, to see if they still make any sense....
-
-
-
-