Showing posts with label battlings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label battlings. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Daryl's Ripped Shirt - Hobbledehoy SAL Part 2

First things first. Here is a cat.


Olive is the BF's little baby. She loves him so much and just wants to be on/with him all the time. It's really pathetic. She is pretty young, so she is feisty as all Hell. I have scars because of her, but not because she is mean, but because she is a crazy cat who doesn't understand proper "claw" etiquette. 


Here is another cat. Binx loves my spinning wheel. He lays half under the coffee table and just stares at it as the wheel turns. He is a colony-rescue cat, so sometimes I wonder if he is far smarter than I give him credit for, or borderline "special". 

Back to the yarny part of my blog. I finished my Daryl yarn! I'm really happy with out it turned out, too. I did a thin single, and then n-plied for a nice even fingering weight yarn. There are a total of 24 color blocks.


I'm happy with how the colors blocked. There are two occurrences along the length of the yarn where two of the color blocks are pretty close in color, and I wasn't happy about that, but it'll still look great when it's knit. 


This is why it takes me so long to finish a skein of yarn. I spin very very thinly, and end up with a fingering weight 3-ply. 


Daryl's Ripped Shirt done in a self-striping pattern. 








Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Daryl's Ripped Shirt - Hobbledehoy SAL Part 1

 I got a wonderful "present" in the mail the other day.


Heeehehe. Hobbledehoy fiber. I bought two Spin Alongs from her fall SAL. Congress of Daleks and Daryl's Ripped Shirt. I also bought a classic batt and some uncarded destash fiber. I happened to pick these up from my moms house (where I have my packages delivered) on Friday. The BF works on Saturdays, so generally I am home alone on Saturdays. I promised him I'd try to get some housework done, and his exact words were, "No you won't. You have new fiber." FYI - I did get some housework done. 



Naturally, with The Walking Dead on, I started with Daryl's Ripped Shirt. I was a little nervous because Liz was saying that this color way would be very manly. I was actually really happy with the colors, because they are "manly", but they are also very warm and autumn/fall-feeling. I dumped out my Daryl battlings and took a look at what I had to work with. 


I noticed 4 dark brown battlings, 4 light brown battlings, and 4 colored battlings (red, green, orange and tan). I immediately knew I wanted to do a thin single and n-ply for a self-striping yarn. I sat for a little while longer, staring at my fiber. I knew I wanted the colors to repeat dark brown, light brown, color, dark brown, light brown, color, etc. I just didn't know how many repeats of each color I wanted. (BF: "what are you staring at?") Eventually I settled with 2. Knowing I wouldn't be able to keep the order of the colors straight in my head, I split each battling in half, and the wound a ball of the split battlings in the order I wanted. 


There. Each ball has the color repeats above in the same order. The color repeats won't necessarily be very exact, because I wasn't very careful when splitting each battling vertically. I just eyeballed it to make sure there was about the same amount in each half. I can definitely tell there is more red in one half, but that's ok. I won't be making socks or anything that will require precision. I have a tendency to make a TON of yarn and then never use it. 

I'm excited to see how this comes out! Part 2 to follow as soon as it is skeined!



Saturday, October 12, 2013

The last few weeks, and a Hobbledehoy stash explosion!

I'm a huge fan of Liz of Hobbledehoy...a total fan girl. I first started spinning her batts around the time she exploded on the Etsy fiber scene. I consider myself loyal and dedicated. :)

I also have a minor Hobbledehoy addiction. I consider myself a functioning addict, though, because I still go to work and pay my bills. Not too long ago, Liz started consigning with a local yarn shop, Cloverhill Yarn in Catonsville, MD. I was THRILLED because that yarn shop is almost exactly halfway between my work and my house. So to celebrate her lovely batts being available at Cloverhill, she had a super spinning event there a few weeks ago. 


We all sat in a circle with our wheels, talked about our favorite TV shows and other fiber artists we loooove. I love seeing so many different kinds of wheels! I developed wheel-envy, because there were so many wheels so much nicer than mine. But hey, mine spins and doesn't make that embarrassing wheel-squeak, so that's just fine!


That's my Kromski and part of a Hobbledehoy Battling in the process of being spun. By the way, I LOVE Hobbledehoy's battlings. They are mini-batts, and oh-so manageable. I actually picked up a classic batt, an art batt, and two bags of matching battlings. 


Mmm my bag of goodies. Since the battlings were so manageable, I started with those at the spin-in. They were very purple-y, so I didn't really worry about color repeats or color positioning...I just spun one battling after the other, until I had a 4 oz bobbin full. 


I loved this color way, because there were bits of sari-silk and other texture pieces that made the resulting yarn FUN. I spun pretty thin, but not lace thin. Here's another angle of the almost-full bobbin. 


I was really happy with the results. I still have to soak, whack and dry...but I suspect this will be a really fun yarn to play with. 


Not too long ago, I also bought her "Uncle Cackel" color way of 50/50 merino/tencel hand painted roving. This member of her "Adam's Family" line was  super soft and spun up like butter. Now, the colors on my computer screen were darker than reality, but that's ok because it's still so beautiful. 


Again....6 oz of 50/50 merino/tencel. To handle this much fiber. I literally folded the unbraided roving in half and tore it into two equal-ish 3 oz pieces of roving. The repeats of color were fairly large, so I decided to spin in color-chunks and then n-ply to keep the stripes. Here is what I had winded on my ball-winder. 


The colors striped perfectly! Now on an offhand note...I've been working on my technique. I've always liked to ply from a ball because it's easier to handle. I don't know what possessed me to do that, because 75% of the time I end up with a tangle and high blood pressure. Lately I've started plying the way I SHOULD be plying - from a Lazy Kate. The second half of this roving will be plied from my Lazy Kate, because this was a PAIN to ply from a ball. I've learned my lesson for good.