Spinning with Rita Buchanan
Imagine this: you sit down for dinner at a table set with
your handspun, handwoven table runner and napkins. You clean up the kitchen
wearing your handspun, handwoven apron, and dry dishes with your—you guessed it—HS,
HW dishtowels. You lay yourself to rest on your HS, HW pillowcases, under your
HS, HW blanket. You rise in the morning, take a refreshing shower, and dry off
with your HS, HW cotton terry-cloth towels, doublefaced, no less. You dress for the day in your HS and HW or HK
(that would be handknit) skirt, blouse, jacket.
If it's cold outside, of course you put on your HS, HW, HK cap, scarf,
and gloves.
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Rita Buchanan, star of the new How I Spin DVD.
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A discussion of different fibers types from How I Spin.
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This may sound like a fantasy, but for Rita Buchanan, it's
just life. This woman loves to spin. Really loves it. Rita bubbles over with
the joy of spinning, and of using her handspun yarn for weaving, knitting,
hooking, and on and on. So she does it almost all the time. Her love is
contagious—after a couple of days in her home and studio, I could almost
imagine myself being as thoughtful, creative, and above all, productive, as she
is.
I spent this magical time with her during the filming of her
new DVD, How I Spin. I learned
a lot—fiber preparation (including a dye technique that is easier than baking a
cake from a mix), flicking, carding,
combing, blending, drafting, plying, finishing. But what really sticks in my
mind is how her general approach is just so efficient.
Else how could she get so much done? Part of her secret to efficiency is that
she keeps careful track of everything, and the other part is that she spins in
a very intuitive way. Rita doesn't count twists per inch, but she's careful to
develop a rhythm and stick to it. She doesn't split hairs over whether she's
spinning woolen or worsted style, but she finds a set of hand motions that
achieve the yarn she wants in a comfortable way, and then just keeps doing it
and doing it until she has as much yarn as she needs. She samples incessantly,
and there is clearly joy and creativity in that exercise.
If this sounds a little dry, do not be fooled. When you
least expect it, up will pop Rita's faithful sidekick, Polly Ester the Spinning
Pig. (P.E. for short, since she is a capitalist pig.) Lester the Sheep was on
set, but didn't make the cut. (He's darn cute, but he can't spin.)
If you watch the 2 ½ hours of information-packed content in
this DVD set, you'll learn a lot of technique, but even more important,
you'll see a way of thinking about and practicing your craft that is both
refreshing and inspiring. Thanks, Rita.
—Linda
Filed under: handwoven, Worsted, Plying, Wool Processing, Drum Carder, Handspun, Spinning Wool, Merino Wool, How-To, Carding and Combing, Types of Yarn, Spinning, Processing Fiber