Dose of Fiber
July 3rd, 2009Last time you got the people.
Now you get the stuff.
This is partly the last of the MAS&W wrap-up, partly sequels, partly… I dunno, I don’t have to categorize everything, do I?
For starters, I did some shopping.
Remember how I bought these at NHS&W?

Remember how I said that I will never not buy kid mohair locks from Buckwheat Bridge if I’m lucky enough to have the chance?
Yeah. Two weeks later, there they were at MA and I went back for more. A lot more of the exact same… plus a few others.

All grist for the batt-making mill, but I also have an idea in mind for those two specific colors, the teal and the - what would you call it? - I think of it as a midnight violet. Maybe I’ll even play with it a bit during the Tour de Fleece - we shall see.
I also bought some undyed locks in a range of marvelous natural silver-greys:

I can’t believe I didn’t get any of these for me - they were a personal shopping commission for my friend Sarah, who needed something soft and shiny and silvery-charcoal-y to fill a gap between pale greys and blacks, something that would work well with pygora. If I’d specifically petitioned the universe to invent something perfect to order… this is what it would it would have come back with. And nobody had to do any inventing - I just strolled in and there it was; it’s only the loveliest kid mohair on the planet, and it was right there in a big bag, and I just plunged in my hands and pulled out an enormous double handful and said, yessssss this is it plz kthxbai. Done.
Speaking of grist for the batt-mill… I also picked up some banana silk:

Loving the colors and the shininess; jury’s still out on the blending texture. It’s slippery stuff and it keeps trying to sneak out under the drum when I’m not looking; I don’t trust it. It is NOT the boss of me - but I’m not the boss of it yet either. A good flicking helps keep it in line, but that gets a bit labor-intensive.
Still… ooh shiny, ooh purty colors, ooh keep working with it.
The one other thing I bought - again a planned purchase - was a spindle. At long last, after many months of coveting, I have a sweet little Turkish Delight to call my own.

I’m not sure exactly why I waited so long, except that for some reason I had an odd feeling that this was a spindle I needed to buy in person rather than on-line. So as soon as I could get away to AmyBoogie’s booth I made a beeline for the Jenkins box and rooted through and checked out every single one there… and as usual the spindle I came away with was not the one I thought I wanted. I thought I was in love with the Bolivian Rosewood, and she had one and it was indeed very lovely - but when it came time to say “this one and no other” it turned out I was referring to

It completely charms me that he marks them this way, and that he also signs each one on the edge of the arm.

And how does it spin? It spins like… it spins like… well, really, similes are pointless and silly, because it spins like a Jenkins Turkish Delight, and what could be more enchanting than that?
Here endeth the purchases (I was good!), but here beginneth the gifties. I love my friends, and this is why. Actually, I lie - no, it isn’t. But… it couldn’t hoit.
There was more mohair. Patrick had mentioned to me at NH that he was having some locks dyed in a deep wine-red. Sure enough, so he was, and at MA he brought me some.

What is not to love about that?
Don’t know yet whether these will fall into the maw of the batt cave or become a project in themselves; we will spin no wine before its time, and these need to marinate in the stash for a bit before I’ll know what I want them to be.
This doesn’t:

I know that LOOKS like two pools of molten caramel, one of them with cream swirled into it… but actually it is baby camel. Below, 100% baby camel; above, baby camel semi-blended with silk, 50/50. These were a gift from Cathy-Cate, and looking at this picture made me realize that I have got to head up to the stash RIGHT NOW and add these to my Tour de Fleece basket. I don’t care what they’re going to be - I just need to spin them. Because, seriously - why postpone joy?
But wait… there’s more.
Not only did I shop for Sarah, I received something from her by special courier - Lynn brought generous samples of Bowmont fleece to play with.


Saving these for a lock-by-lock treat. I love me some fine crispy crimp.
Last but by no means least, Jesh has started experimenting with bottom whorls. When I saw a picture of this first work-in-progress prototype I told her it had to be MINE… but I didn’t expect her to present it to me. I didn’t even have to steal it from her bag! She just GAVE it to me!

All day Saturday I carried it with me and spun on it wherever I went, and wherever I went it evoked the same reaction: WHATISTHATLETMETRYOMGWANT.
The whorl is ingeniously assembled out of a pair of coordinated drawer-pull cover pieces - kitsch made magically un-kitschy.

The spindle is tiny (why do I ALWAYS forget to put something in the picture for scale? - anyway the whorl diameter is maybe 1-1/2″? something like that) and light and beautifully suited to the kind of laceweight games I love to play. Alas, I didn’t get to keep it long - it had to go back to the shop for further development. Jesh was trying out a new glue, or something, and we learned the hard way that either it hadn’t fully set or it just couldn’t quite hold up to the sweltering heat of that weekend. Well, that’s what you get for being in on the ground floor when something new is still in development… you end up bereft of your new toy while Ms. Perfectionist continues to perfect it. It’ll be worth it, mind you, because she’s also making some slight adjustments in weighting and balance that will make it even better. And then… then I’ll get my baby back and I sure hope she’ll have plenty of material to make lots of little brothers and sisters for it, because I think it could become a hot seller.
I always pretend I don’t care what a tool looks like as long as it works well - and in fact it’s no pretense that if a choice must be made I’ll choose function over form every time. But it’s not a BAD thing to have an excellent tool that also happens to be adorably cute, is it? Such are both these small spindles in their entirely different ways - the Jenkins Turkish Delight and the Jesh, um, I don’t know what its name is so for now I’m calling it Drawers-in-a-Twist.
That’s it for the MA loot, as such, unless you count the fact that thanks to my diabolical plan of Tom-Sawyering Jesh into doing so much of my spinning for me, by the time I left for my slow careful trip home I had ALL the singles spun from my Romney sock batts. These are the ones I mentioned last time, the ones I called “Petrel,” the ones I made for me. If you think you’re seeing a touch of that Buckwheat Bridge teal in here, then you think right and you’re not seeing things:


(Dang color balance. Real color is somewhere squarely between those two.)
As soon as I decently could after getting home and unpacking, I set myself to plying…

… and finishing…

… and now I have a geeky thrill’s worth of 3-ply sock yarn, 375 yards or something, that I only wish I had time to knit.
Here endeth this phase of Blog BACKlog.
I had big plans for filling in the other columns - the regular bACKlog and the Right Now updates, but I’ll have mercy on you and limit those to short-cuts for now.
Right Now: I Coulda Beena Contenda; I Am a Contenda
In the Right Now Department, two items.
- I didn’t like to mention it while I was still struggling with it (doesn’t do to scare the customers too much), but now that the problem is solved I don’t mind telling you that a week or two ago Club Tsock #3, “Two Cassandras,” was really kicking my sorry butt. I had this very fancy high-flown concept for one section of it, something to do with tangible metaphors for the forces of history and divinity, for irony and reversal, for free-will and destiny, for curse and blessing; something that I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt could be rendered into a visual/textural interpretation; but there was a huge gap between concept and realization, a precipice on whose brink I stood feeling like an idiot - couldn’t figure out whether I was a chamois or a lemming. I’m on the other side of that gap now, though I still can’t tell you whether I leapt it or bridged it or flew over it or got shot across it from a cannon (hmmmm, where’d those bruises come from anyway?). It was a design gap, not an execution one - the result is challenging to think about but not difficult to knit. I was going to run on at some length here about the philosophical and metaphysical implications of the way I defined the problem and chose the solution… but I’m sure you’ll be relieved to hear that I waited a little too long to write it down, and now all that pontification has quietly evaporated from my head like last night’s dreams. I can’t remember a thing about it. But I’ll have pictures soon.
- ON YOUR MARK.
The Tour de Fleece starts tomorrow, and I am as ready as I know how to be. Got my team logo decal on my cup-holder (thanks, Kelly!). Over the past couple of days I’ve cleared some decks and done some rearranging and organizing of stash and tools. Last night saw a Ply-a-Thon of outstanding singles - I’ll show you the yarns next time - and a clearing off of storage bobbins and a choosing of fiber; the night before saw a Card-a-Thon of mildly epic proportions; today I pulled apart the CPW and scrubbed out the business end of its tilt-tension mechanism but good…

… oiled everything that could be oiled, and reassembled it all in working order…

… and there it stands, champing at the bit, pawing the ground, straining every nerve for the sound of the starter’s pistol.
GET SET.
At its feet, the first wave of candidates.

Clockwise from top left:
Abby luxury batts in Peaches; my own blend of BL and silk; three selections from David at Southern Cross Fibre: Polwarth roving in Sunburnt Country, luxury batts in Kangaroo Paw, Polwarth batts in Koala. As I mentioned earlier, I’m going to add the baby ca(ra)mel/silk. On mature reflection I’m probably going to pull the two batches of 100% Polwarth for marination purposes - I don’t think I want to spin them without a plan, especially not when I’m going for a personal speed record. The others - I don’t know yet what the YARN is going to be but at least I do know what KIND of yarn I want to make out of them - so they’re good choices because they’re all conducive to smooth drafting, and they’re all things I can just blast off and spinspinspin till I drop or run out.
Tomorrow, then. Me and my CPW. Each of us like a giant refreshed, ready to Suck Less. Bring it on.
BACKlog: Right to Privetcy
I would like to state for the record, please, that I am not fond of privet.
I recognize that properly tended it makes for a useful hedge, in a good-fences-make-good-neighbors sort of way. But it annoys me. I don’t like its insinuating ways. I don’t like the smell of its blossoms. I especially don’t like the smell of its blossoms when it trumps the scent of honeysuckle, as inevitably it does. I consider it a cruel joke that these two bloom at the same time, almost as cruel a joke as the olfactory conflict between Scotch broom and lilac.
What I really hate, though, is the way it grows, when untrimmed, to second-story-window height in no time at all, really - a matter of mere years of neglect - and becomes a dense impenetrable forest that spreads its leventy-kazillion nasty little blossoms all over the neighborhood with a special emphasis on my driveway, where on day after day of the recent monsoon (I swear it has been raining for at least 12 out of every 9 days for the past two months) I find them piled thick and deep in a drenched layer that completely covers my car. The only thing worse than a metric ton of tiny privet blossoms is a metric ton of tiny waterlogged and rotting privet blossoms.
The stuff’s indestructible, to all intents and purposes, so there really isn’t much specialized skill involved. It’s just not that hard to take a strategic trimmer to it a couple of times a year, is it? Really, is that so much to ask?
Yup, I hate me some severely neglected privet, hate it a lot. Hate hate hate.
Especially when it’s in my own back yard.
































