Showing posts with label dorset sheep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dorset sheep. Show all posts

Friday, 28 February 2014

Sweet success!!

There is NOTHING more rewarding that starting a new hobby (spinning) and creating something new, then to put it available for sale, have someone buy it and give you good feedback on it. 

My very nice yarn

Last month, I spun some Dorset/Hampshire fleece to create two 100g skeins of hand spun yarn. I have advertised them both on my ebay shop, only to have someone buy one of them. Ebay does put pressure on its sellers to offer FREE postage. That's all well and good but Royal Mail won't deliver it for free so the costs have to be absorbed somewhere. I advertised the yarn at £6 each with free postage and packaging. So when I did managed to sell one skein, just how cheaply could I send it and be happy it would turn up at its destination?

The normal postage for first class small parcel signed for is £4.10. That is a BIG chunk of £6. If I could get it down to large letter size I could send it first class large letter signed for at £2.30. One of the new toys that I have is a vacuum packer. It takes out the air from the package and heat seals it to create a vacuum. Brilliant for home made bacon but how would my yarn fair? It was worth a try. I squished it down as much as I could while the air was being extracted until the yarn looked like it had melted in the pack. I recalled someone else sending me some yarn like this and my feeling of horror as I opened the package to see the contents. I parcelled it up and took it to the post office. Yes, it would go through the large letter slop on the counter top gadget, and it was sent. I hurriedly emailed the buyer to let her know what I had done and how she should pierce the package to let the yarn reinflate back to normal.

She has received the yarn, reinflated it and left feedback .... very nice yarn.

Wow!! That's something I created! Brilliant. 

The other skein is still available for sale in my ebay shop.

www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Handspun-Dorset-Hampshire-fleece-Natural-100g-chunky-yarn-/331113021654?pt=UK_Crafts_Knitting_Crochet_EH&hash=item4d17dfc0d6

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

So, here we go!

So January is the month for working on the Dorset/Hampshire fleece that I purchased last year. It was already combed, which was nice because it is hard work on the elbows and mine is still grumbling because of the cold, damp weather.

I decided to spin the first lot. My thoughts on this is that if I spin two lots of 50g and my spinning is fairly consistent, they should be the same length. Well, they almost were. This is important when you ply yarn to make it thicker. Next came the measuring, mentioned in the last blog and at 106m that confirmed that the yarn was coming out chunky. Armed with all this information and after a light wash, the yarn was listed onto ebay. 

Blues and purples
I also purchased some Jacquard Acid dyes last year to tackle some hand dyeing. This involves boiling up the fleece or yarn in a big saucepan with vinegar (acid) and adding powdered dyes which merge together well to create the final effect. The problem is boiling real wool can make it felt and fuse together. A lot of care is needed. So I split the roving into 3 and plaited it to give it some strength. 

Yellow and greens
I have managed to create two 50g batches of blue/purple roving (unspun but carded fleece) and two 50g batches of yellow/green roving. Then they have been washed and drip dried so that they can be packaged up. They have all been listed on ebay and I shall see how (if) it sells with the idea of how the future fleeces will be processed. 

Follow their progress in my ebay shop:  http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Layette-Knitting

Sunday, 19 January 2014

An exciting idea!

Last year I set off on a journey of discovery to teach myself how to spin a sheep's fleece into yarn. This is partly because I was inspired by someone else who was trying the same thing and also because I knit, so it seemed a natural progression. I could also conduct a survey of the different British native breeds to determine which one would be preferable to keep for spinning. 

I had a varying results and then stopped towards the end of the year. I had purchased around 10 complete fleeces over the summer along with various devices for carding the fleece. Some of the fleeces are beautiful and some are seriously gnarly. The fleeces have been stored suspended from the garage rafters in hessian sacks and pillow cases, and resemble a collection of body bags. I have tried to spin various fleeces as they have arrived and probably narrowed my choice down the Shetland sheep or perhaps Suffolks. Hmmm. What to do with all these fleeces?


Dorset sheep

Last week I had an idea which has become a kind of New Year's Resolution! I will spend a month on each type of fleece. I will process them as they allow, spinning and possibly dyeing them to create yarn and roving to use or sell on ebay. 

Niddy-noddy


A week later and I have spun 100g of Dorset/Hamsphire fleece (it came like that), and dyed two lots of 50g carded fleece to sell in bags. I had to calculate the length of the spun yarn which was achieved by measuring the niddy-noddy using string (so that it doesn't stretch). One round was 1.8m, then counting how many rounds the spun yarn achieved (59),
1.8 x 59 = 106m. This also confirmed my suspicions that the yarn that I had spun and plied was coming in as chunky. I'm happy with that. Both the spun yarn and dyed roving have been washed and now comes the real problem of getting them dry again. I can't put them in the drier so they are drip-drying ... in January. From the Spring, they could go outside.  


In the meantime, the knitting has been progressing slowly. The stock in the ebay shop has been dwindling but I have nearly completed another cricket jumper and started on a new blue cable jumper. I have also been making big blankets, probably by instinct for the forthcoming severe winter.