Merino fiber that has about twelve crimps per inch. Romney fiber that has about six crimps per inch. Lincoln fiber that has about three crimps per inch. Locks of Potential What is it that brings you to spinning? I imagine we come to spinning for a whole host of reasons—as diverse as we are as spinners...
Posted to
Amy's Blog
by
Amy Clarke Moore
on
Dec 7, 2011
Filed under:
Filed under: Natural Fiber, How To Spin, Spin-Off Magazine, Spinning Wool, Merino Wool, Wool Processing, Your Yarn, Types of Yarn, Spinning, Processing Fiber
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
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...
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