Spin Control and Conscious Spinning

Apr 1, 2009

Aside from the fact that I get to play with yarn and fiber everyday, there are some moments when I realize that my job is really, really cool. Enter Exhibit A (at left), a super advance copy of Spin Control, the upcoming Interweave book by Amy King of Spunky Eclectic fame. I’ve been looking forward to this book, and the other day I walked downstairs to the book department and managed to snag myself a preview copy even though it doesn’t come out for a few more months—I feel like a kid on Christmas morning!

This book is a fabulous tutorial about how to spin the exact yarn you want—there are sections on how to achieve different color effects by predrafting your fiber, the difference in wear between a woolen and worsted yarn, how to spin a strong singles, and much, much more. The information is the perfect mix of technical education and inspiration, and I’ve realized something as I’ve been reading—I don’t have much spin control. I really only spin one kind of yarn—a fairly low-twist two-ply yarn that measures right around 15 wraps per inch. I don’t do this on purpose, I just start spinning and that’s the yarn I end up with. I’m going to call this phenomenon “comfort-zone yarn” (you can see a bunch of mine in the photo at bottom left).

In my last newsletter post, I mentioned that my anxiety over knitting with handspun comes from a fear of yarn substitution. I think this is where the problem stems from: while I’ve gotten pretty good at making comfort-zone yarn, I don’t have the skills to spin a yarn to meet existing specifications. I started spinning and fell straight into a spinning rut! This really doesn’t sit well with me because I don’t just want to make good comfort-zone yarn, I want to make good any yarn.

I know we’re about a quarter of the way done with 2009 already, but Amy’s book has inspired me to make a belated New Year’s resolution—conscious spinning! I will not fall idly into my comfort zone. I will consider color repeats, drafting methods, and plying possibilities. I will think about what size my yarn should be, how it should wear, and what kind of stitch definition I’d like it to have. I will do my best to plan the technical aspects of my yarn before I get lost in the meditative trance of the wheel. In short, I will be in control, and the yarn will do what I say.

Onward, to total yarn domination! (insert diabolical laugh here)


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Comments

on Apr 1, 2009 3:43 PM

Any time of year is a good time for a new year's resolution! Think of it this way, you're making the year anew. It is, then, for you a new year, right then and there.

And I hear you on that comfort yarn. I'm struggling with that one myself. I want to be good at making all kinds of yarn, so I can suit it to my mood, my project, whatever!

KatheL wrote
on Apr 2, 2009 1:25 PM

Hi Stephanie,

That sounds really great, need I say I am green with envy?

How about setting up some challenges either here or in Spin Off, challenging spinners to make yarns of certain properties?

I have taught spinning for many years, and I find that all too many spinners get stuch with the one type of yarn they learn first. My aim has always been to teach spinners to make different yarns, using different techniques, choosing different types of fibers to achieve the most appropriate result for their project.

And, that it is the spinner who desided the outcome of the process, not the wheel - but that understanding the mechanichs of your spinning wheel is essential so you can adjust and optimize it accordingly to your project.

Another subject I would like to open for discussion is adjusting, fine tuning and improving spinning wheel, the last part mainly addressed to the manufacturers - but also spinners with a handyman available can make major improvments if they know how.

So many times I have met new spinners who have had problems with spinning, only to finde manufacturing errors or lack of proper adjustment in their brand new spinning wheels.

And when your are fresh spinner, you don't know where the error lies, so most people automatically assume it is their own clumsyness - little do they know about checking if the bobbin runs smooth on the spindle rod, or how to correct it if it doesn't, just as an example.

I hope this may be of use in our forum,

Kathe Lewis,

Denmark

CarolineA wrote
on Apr 2, 2009 5:39 PM

Thank you for that detailed review - I have this book on order at Amazon and am really looking forward to receiving it!

on Apr 3, 2009 4:32 PM

This sounds like a great book for improving spinning.  I actually kind of laughed though when I read it, because on the same day I had written a post on my blog "Daydream Spinner" in which I come to terms with my uneven yarns (www.whorlwindweaver.blogspot.com).

Of course, I'm rethinking that a little--but after 20 years of spinning, my mind does tend to roam. :) Rose

misfitknits wrote
on Apr 14, 2009 2:51 PM

i, too, am so jealous of the perks that come with your job!!! i've been waiting for this book to come out and *this shows how much of an information hog i am* have been wanting to get 'the intentional spinner' for months!!!!

i can't wait to read both! as an intermediate spinner i can't resist gleaning new info on every aspect of spinning! and that except from the intentional spinner in the spring issue of spin-off.... WHAT A TEASE!!!!

Lee wrote
on Sep 17, 2009 2:05 PM

Yay! I just bought this book and I've only read the first couple of chapters.  It looks like there's plenty more to look forward to as I read on.  This is exactly the type of advice I've been looking for.