The prompt for today's Kentucky Wool Week photo challenge is Show and Tell, so I'm going to use this as an opportunity to show something I did over the summer and tell how I did it. If I keep this up, I might eventually get the blog caught back up :-).
Instagram followers might remember taking a video tour of some fleeces getting ready to be shipped off to Stonehedge Fiber Mill and then seeing the following picture a few weeks later. The project in the works is a new Lamb Camp yarn that for now I'm calling The Bottle Lamb Edition. It will be a blend of every single bottle lamb I've ever raised.
I should say the video tour showed at least a tiny bit of wool left from every lamb...except Punkin. I really, really wanted to include Punkin, the lamb who started it all. While I didn't have any wool left, I did have some leftover yarn from way back when I paid someone to spin for me before I learned that I liked doing such things. I wondered if it would be possible to un-spin some of that yarn.
In 25 words or less...yarn is really nothing more than fiber held together by twist. You spin two singles and then you spin those two singles together to get a two ply yarn. Without getting really complicated, that's all you really need to know to follow what I decided to try.
13 comments:
A labor of love!
Love...love...love...ly
A labor of love.
Well, well, well.......quite the unwinding. Why not eh?
gorgeous! I have not tried to drop spindle....yet. Maybe in my future's future!
Every animal is blessed to have/had you and Sir Tim as their family.
Dee
Love this. ❤️
This will be a special blend indeed.
This is so touching! It shows how much you love your sheep!
Doesn't surprise me at all that you would do this – and it NEEDED to be done! Part of me would love a skein of the resulting yarn, but I don't think I'd be able to bring myself to USE it, and I'm trying real hard to declutter before I die.
A labor of love for sure!! Well done!!
Long story, short version: you made yarn back into wool.
You are good!
Although without the story, I don't think I could have figured it out myself.
Deb
How cool is that! A little of all of them! Wonder what you will make with it. A nice snugly afghan or sweater? A lacy shawl? The possibilities...
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