My first Tour de Fleece is going well!! This is an organic polwarth braid I got from the Yarn Adventure Truck.

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@movahkiin
My first Tour de Fleece is going well!! This is an organic polwarth braid I got from the Yarn Adventure Truck.
TdF Day 9: Meh
trouble getting in the mood today, but I did pet the fiber a great deal and technically spun a tiny bit to hold the line.
This dance costume, constructed over a flesh-colored leotard with a fitted strapless bodice decorated with white bugle bead stripes and a long flowing beaded skirt, was designed by Edith Head for Juliet Prowse as Lili in the 1960 Elvis film 𝑮.𝑰. 𝑩𝒍𝒖𝒆𝒔. The costume made a brief appearance more than a decade later in the 1971 film 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑮𝒓𝒊𝒔𝒔𝒐𝒎 𝑮𝒂𝒏𝒈, where it was worn by Connie Stevens as Anna Borg. Now owned by Larry McQueen of The Collection of Motion Picture Costume Design, it has been exhibited several times over the years, including at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art’s 𝑬𝒅𝒊𝒕𝒉 𝑯𝒆𝒂𝒅: 𝑯𝒐𝒍𝒍𝒚𝒘𝒐𝒐𝒅'𝒔 𝑪𝒐𝒔𝒕𝒖𝒎𝒆 𝑫𝒆𝒔𝒊𝒈𝒏𝒆𝒓 exhibition. This is not the only Elvis film to feature recycled costumes. 𝑻𝒊𝒄𝒌𝒍𝒆 𝑴𝒆, for example, famously reused a gown once worn by Audrey Hepburn. You can find that, as well as more reused costumes from the Larry McQueen Collection on our website at Recycledmoviecostumes
Purple-green bfl fibre, my first fractal, undeniably alien-monster yarn ٠࣪ ⚛︎
More photos 。𖦹°
Tour de Fleece day 9!
Had to figure out a different way to photograph it because otherwise today was identical to yesterday ^_^;
Took yesterday's skein off the niddy noddy, wound yesterday's plied bobbin onto the niddy noddy, plied the next bobbin of purple corriedale/nylon, (was extremely puzzled and think I might have put 12g on one and 36g on the other? really hope so. guess I'll find out tomorrow), spun 12.5g of the alpaca.
(Wasn't paying enough attention and forgot to switch my wheel's direction between the ply and the spin, leaving this bobbin to be the opposite of the other two. Oh well, not the end of the world.)
Tomorrow is the first rest day; I'm hoping to ply the two completed alpaca. Might give in to the urge to spin if the mood takes me, but it's also
TdF Day 07-09
Day 07: I thought it would be a rest day BC of a wedding, but I had an hour between the ceremony and the reception and I had my spindle with me.
Day 08:
Rest day. Didn't feel like spinning. But I carded the second half of the Polarfuchs and ran the rest of the Rambouillet through a diz for the spindle.
Day 09:
I wanted to do some park spinning, really!. I absolutely made sure I had my spindle bag with me. But when I sat down and got out spindle and ladle I noticed... I left the fibres at home...
Back at home I sat down at the wheel and spun the whole second Polarfuchs single
Plan for today: Ply the polarfuchs Maybe start the blue project. All under the premise my mental health doesn't suffer too much from the stuff I have to do first
TdF Day 2: ALL the Reds
I had so many little variations on red fiber kicking around from an art yarn workshop and the Camaj grab bag that I blended things a bit on my mini-combs and spun it up along with a bit of silk hankie. It came out much finer than I expected and overall quite pretty.
TDF Day 9
Challenge day!
My challenge was to spin as much as possible before midnight. Considering I didn’t get off work until 6 PM that wasn’t a ton (32.9g), but I did manage more than I’ve done in a single day so far during the tour.
However, I did manage to hit my stretch goal of spinning at least 200g! Guess I’ll add another stretch goal for 300? 350?
I have earned two treats, since I also tried a new breed with this project. Going to have to find time to get them though…
Going to ply the other project tomorrow so I can earn $10 towards my fibre festival budget.
TdF Day 8
Ply day ft. Bruno, the helpingest dog.
TdF day 1 progress! Pretty happy with the amount of spinning I got done yesterday considering the migraine. One big sky split into three little skies. Spun up to where we start to get some orange in the first single 🌄
Day 2! Finished the first single and got almost all the way through the second before I had to stop for finger health. We're on hour 119 of this migraine but pain is very low now so I think my Migraine of July is finally ending. My hubris says that today I will finish all the singles AND ply the sky, but my joints will probably say NO
Day 3! Finished the second single and got like 75% of the way through the third!! We're gonna ply today I can feel it
Dyeing experiment
Currently I'm in love with Treenway Silks' "Resilience" yarn (bombyx silk / retted bamboo blend). I tried dyeing it yesterday in a spirit of experimentation; efficient I was not, but the results are pretty! Since this is intended for my own use (handweaving) and fortunately dyeing is time-consuming but much of that time is unattended soaking...
I covet more of skeins of this lolsob; my love of gradients will be the death of me yet.
Finished up spinning the Fossil Fibers Moon Joy braid!
I think longdraw has finally clicked for me. I got my espinner’s settings dialed in just right today, so the second two bobbins (about 2.6 oz) flew by during the course of three Star Trek episodes.
Now both my hands and the bobbins need a rest before plying!
Finally finished!!
Three skeins of lace weight two-ply, 250g in total. One ply is Regenbogenwolle mini batts in „Wing Whisper“, the other is Lang Yarns „Cashmere Dreams“ in seafoam green. One of my woolee winder bobbins is free, youpiiii!!
Tour de fleece on vacation
Car spinning, ferry spinning and cottage spinning
First time doing an indirect warp on the rigid heddle loom. I wanted to avoid having a big length length between the sides and the middle of the warp. I was having trouble winding it so I followed some guides to make a DIY tensioning device. It was very fiddly to set up but worked well once I figured out the right amount of rubber bands.
Things I wish I had read in "beginner" sewing tutorials/people had told me before I started getting into sewing
You have to hem *everything* eventually. Hemming isn't optional. (If you don't hem your cloth, it will start to fray. There are exceptions to this, like felt, but most cloth will.)
The type of cloth you choose for your project matters very much. Your clothing won't "fall right" if it's not the kind of stretchy/heavy/stiff as the one the tutorial assumes you will use.
Some types of cloth are very chill about fraying, some are very much not. Linen doesn't really give a fuck as long as you don't, like, throw it into the washing machine unhemmed (see below), whereas brocade yearns for entropy so, so much.
On that note: if you get new cloth: 1. hem its borders (or use a ripple stitch) 2. throw it in the washing machine on the setting that you plan to wash it going forward 3. iron it. You'll regret it, if you don't do it. If you don't hem, it'll thread. If you don't wash beforehand, the finished piece might warp in the first wash. If you don't iron it, it won't be nice and flat and all of your measuring and sewing will be off.
Sewing's first virtue is diligence, followed closely by patience. Measure three times before cutting. Check the symmetry every once in a while. If you can't concentrate anymore, stop. Yes, even if you're almost done.
The order in which you sew your garment's parts matters very much. Stick to the plan, but think ahead.
You'll probably be fine if you sew something on wrong - you can undo it with a seam ripper (get a seam ripper, they're cheap!)
You can use chalk to draw and write on the cloth.
Pick something made out of rectangles for your first project.
I recommend making something out of linen as a beginner project. It's nearly indestructible, barely threads and folds very neatly.
Collars are going to suck.
The sewing machine can't hurt you (probably). There is a guard for a reason and while the needle is very scary at first, if you do it right, your hands will be away from it at least 5 cm at any given time. Also the spoils of learning machine sewing are not to be underestimated. You will be SO fast.
I believe that's all - feel free to add unto it.
Thinking about a girl I grew up with who spun her dog's fur into yarn, then knitted gloves out of the yarn and how all the other kids made fun of her mercilessly for it.
And how she's now used those gloves for over thirty winters and each time she puts them on, she gets to pet her beloved dog's fur even though Ginger is long gone. And how even though her bones have long since been swallowed by the earth, Ginger is still protecting her owner from the cold.
Just an ancient pact, passed down from the earliest dogs that slept beside humans to keep us warm, continuing on for decades after one of their deaths.