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With all the great spinning workshops that Interweave kee ps putting out, my video library is outgrowing my bookshelf space. Fortunately, the folks in our online education department have come up with a brilliant sol ution. They've just launched our new Craft Daily site! This means that I can watch...
Posted to
Guest Blog
by
Amy Clarke Moore
on
May 15, 2013
Filed under:
Filed under: How To Spin, Spin-Off Magazine, Plying, Drum Carder, Handspun, How-To, Types of Yarn, Carding and Combing, Spinning, Processing Fiber
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Start with the right tools, it makes a big difference Maggie Casey showing Eunny Jang how best to insert twist in Start Spinning: The Video. It is starting to feel like I've always been able to spin. What a wonderful feeling! When I sit down at my wheel my default yarn comes naturally. And, well...
Posted to
Liz's Blog
by
Liz Good
on
Dec 5, 2012
Filed under:
Filed under: Spin-Off Magazine, Handspun, Plying, How To Spin, Spindle Spinning, Drop Spindle, Wool Processing, How-To, Types of Yarn, Your Yarn, Spinning, Processing Fiber
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Is it worsted? Is it woolen? Is it something in between? You start spinning in earnest and suddenly you are making yarn! It's a great feeling—that fiber magically transforming right before your eyes in your hands. As you gain confidence in your ability to make a yarn that both sticks together...
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Donna Towell helping 4-H members learn to spin. Wisconsin Spindle and Dyepot Guild. Spinning demonstrations at the county fair. Wisconsin Spindle and Dyepot Guild. Learning to spin llama. Wisconsin Spindle and Dyepot Guild. What was your first handspinning experience? Many people are inspired to learn...
Posted to
Spinner's Connection
by
Kate Larson
on
Jun 29, 2012
Filed under:
Filed under: Dyeing, Natural Dyes, Processing Fiber, Spindle Spinning, Drop Spindle, Handspun, How To Spin, Drum Carder, Spin-Off Magazine, SOAR, Types of Yarn, Carding and Combing, Spinning, Dyeing Yarn
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A trip down memory lane I just received a copy of the Spin-Off 2000 Collection CD, and seeing it brought back a flood of memories—it is the year I transitioned from assistant editor to guest editor, to editor, represented in the Spring, Summer, and Fall issues. It was all so new to me—every...
Posted to
Amy's Blog
by
Amy Clarke Moore
on
Jan 18, 2012
Filed under:
Filed under: Handspun, Rare Wools, Spinning Cotton, Spindle Spinning, Spinning Wheels, Drop Spindle, How To Spin, Spin-Off Magazine, Spinning Silk, Spinning, Alpaca Wool
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Liz demonstrates spinning unsuccessfully at the Estes Park Wool Market in 2004. Ed Franquemont skillfully demonstrates Andean spinning in his 1983 article. Sarah Natani deftly demonstrates Navajo spinning in Donna Muller's 1995 article. On the shoulders of giants When I learned to spin it was, as...
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What were your thoughts and feelings when that first spinning wheel came into your life? Did you sit down for a trial spin on it at a fiber festival where it followed you home? Did its silhouette catch your eyes at a garage sale and become your one and only purchase of the day? Was it a brand-spanking...
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Master making textural art yarn Jacey Boggs is a spinning powerhouse. A frequent contributor to Spin-Off and SOAR mentor, she has made a name for herself with her analytical thoughtful approach to making novelty yarns that aren't only fun but also functional. Later this year, Jacey will be releasing...
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Amy behind the scenes at the video shoot. Maggie Casey on the set spinning effortlessly. Liz sitting in to test out the framing of the shot. Is Maggie Casey the Wind Beneath Your Wings? My brother, in addition to his day job (well, night job) of delivering milk and being an artist, has also been working...
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I love cotton In the small Costa Rican village where I learned to spin, cotton was grown on trees, spun on handspindles, and woven on backstrap looms to make skirts and bags. Stephenie Gaustad introducing you to a wealth of information on how to spin cotton in her video, Spinning Cotton. When I first...
Posted to
Amy's Blog
by
Amy Clarke Moore
on
Mar 23, 2011
Filed under:
Filed under: Natural Fiber, Handspun, Spinning Cotton, Spindle Spinning, Drop Spindle, How To Spin, Spin-Off Magazine, Processing Cotton, Spinning, Processing Fiber
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Bobbi Daniels's Angora bunnies A Miao woman in the Yunnan Province of China spinning the indumentum on the backs of leaves The Qiviut Shawlette by Sandi Wiseheart Snuggle up with the Winter issue of Spin-Off The Winter 2010 issue of Spin-Off magazine should be arriving in your mailbox or at your...
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Marking time with yarn A note from Amy Clarke Moore: You may or may not know that our wonderful assistant editor, Stefanie Berganini, decided to take a position at our sister publication, Stitch. She's just down the hall from us, so while you might miss her lively notes in our weekly e-newsletter...
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Bobbi Daniels didn't set out to learn how to spin—but spinning came to her when she needed it the most—and in fact, by following the serendipitous path spinning laid out for her, she's found happiness and a career, and lots of bunnies. We asked Bobbi some questions about her spinning...
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Meet a Natural Spinner DeAnna Dailey came to spinning in a very normal way (through the accumulation of hair from a pet)—though the direction she's taken her spinning is not very common (spinning is part of her daily life as a nature skills teacher). We've asked her some questions about...
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For years, you've had a secret, inexplicable yearning to make yarn—a subconscious desire that you've resisted, rationalized away, and pushed to the back of your mind. Things have happened, though, that make this resisting harder. Perhaps a good knitting friend has confessed a desire to...
Posted to
Amy's Blog
by
Amy Clarke Moore
on
Sep 16, 2009
Filed under:
Filed under: Natural Fiber, SOAR, Handspun, Spindle Spinning, Drop Spindle, Plying, How To Spin, Spin-Off Magazine, Handwoven, Your Yarn, Types of Yarn, Spinning, Processing Fiber