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                      | By Rebecca Hermen |   
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                            So you've decided to spindle 
                            spin.  Now what?  You need a spindle. Not 
                            just any spindle -- a spindle that you will love and 
                            that will inspire you to learn something new. There 
                            are a lot of different spindles to choose from.  
                            How do you pick? What do all of these words mean?  
                            Drop spindle?  Hand spindle? Top whorl? Bottom 
                            whorl?  What's a whorl?  Takhli? What about 
                            all the different woods? What about the weight?  
                          
                          
                          At the very basic there 
                          are three types of spindle: top whorl, bottom 
                          whorl and supported.  The whorl is the disk 
                          or ball that provides the weight to keep the spin 
                          going.  All three types are hand spindles.  
                          Top and bottom whorl are both types of drop or 
                          hand spindles.  Drop spindles can spin almost 
                          any fiber you want from dog hair to flax to wool 
                          to Ingeo to silk.
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                              | Schacht, Grafton Mala, 
                                Ann Grout, Bosworth, Turkish, Cascade St. Helens |  
 
 
                             
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                              | Top whorl 
                                spindles: Bosworth midi, Grafton Mala, Cascade 
                                St. Helens |   It has a hook on one end 
                            above the whorl and a shaft below the whorl for storing 
                            your finished yarn.  Top whorl spindles can come in 
                          many weights and sizes. Top whorl spindles usually spin 
                          faster and quite often are lighter than their bottom 
                          whorl counterparts.  They are great for very fine, 
                          lace weight yarns.  They also usually are quicker 
                          to load since they have no need of wrapping or half-hitching 
                          to keep your yarn on the spindle. 
                            A bottom whorl spindle usually 
                          just has a shaft and a whorl, sometimes a hook and sometimes 
                          not. Finished yarn is stored above the whorl.  
                          To keep the yarn on the spindle, you usually have to 
                          do some wrapping and half-hitching.  
                          
                          Bottom whorl spindles also come 
                          in various sizes. Bottom whorl spindles are usually 
                          less bouncy, spin longer and are better for plying yarns 
                          on than top whorl spindles.  
                          
                          Of course, you can find rabid 
                          advocates of either top whorl or bottom whorl spindles.  
                          Just like you can rabid advocates of various types of 
                          spinning wheels, fibers, yarns or knitting needles.  
                          Your best bet is to take a few spindles for a test drive 
                          and decide what you like. 
                          
                          Supported spindles are less common 
                          in both availability and usage.  They can have 
                          hooks or not.  They can have bead whorls or flat 
                          whorls. One end of a supported spindle sits in a bowl 
                          or some other shallow container and the working end 
                          hangs free.  The spindle is spun and twist builds 
                          up in the yarn. The spindle is stopped and the twist 
                          is drafted out into the fiber.  These types of 
                          spindles are best for spinning very short fibers like 
                          cotton or dryer lint or for spinning very fine.  
                          A Takhli is a type of supported spindle. 
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                              | Bottom 
                                whorl spindles: Schacht, Anne Grout, turkish |  
                            So, you've decided what type 
                          of spindle you want and you're looking at spindle ads. 
                          They talk about featherweight, or .05 oz, or maxi, or 
                          boat anchor. What are they talking about?  It's 
                          all about weight.  The weight of your spindle to 
                          a great extent dictates how thick, or heavy your yarn 
                          can be.  You can't spin lace weight yarn on a really 
                          heavy spindle and you can't spin bulky yarn on a featherweight.  
                          Starting out, unless you're really sure you are planning 
                          on always making lace or super bulky hats or only plying 
                          commercial yarns, you should choose a spindle that weights 
                          somewhere between 1.75 to 2.5 oz.  This is a nice 
                          medium weight.  
                          
                          Okay, you decided on the 
                          type. You've decided on the weight. What about 
                          woods? There are hundreds of woods that spindles 
                          are made of and a million combinations between 
                          whorl and shaft. (I won't even mention the ceramic 
                          or ploy clay varieties of spindles.) My advice 
                          is check the weight, check the price -- make sure 
                          both are in your range. Then let the spindle speak 
                          to you. Which one is gorgeous? Which one would 
                          you cry over if it goes home with someone else? 
                              | Quick 
                                  reference to spindle weights. 
 Typically, the heavier the spindle, the 
                                  fatter the yarn it will spin.
 
 
                                   
                                    | To 
                                      spin... | your 
                                      spindle should weigh...
 |   
                                    | lace | .5 
                                      oz/15 gm |   
                                    | fingering | 1 
                                      oz/28gm |   
                                    | sport/DK | 1.75 
                                      oz/50gm |   
                                    | worsted | 2.5 
                                      oz/70 gm |   
                                    | bulky | 3 
                                      oz+/85gm |  |  Now where to buy a spindle?  
                            If you have the opportunity, go to a wool or fiber 
                            festival where you get your fingers on a several spindles 
                            and try them out.  Or find a local spinning guild 
                            and do the same thing.  A spinning guild has 
                            the advantage of usually having a "spindle person" 
                            who can give you pointers on how to use your spindle.  
                            You can also shop the web.  You can find spindle 
                            reviews, spindler mail lists and spindle vendors. 
                            You can even find directions for making very inexpensive 
                            spindles out of old CDs and dowel rods (http://www.interweave.com/spin/resources.asp 
                            ).   
                             
                              | Obsess 
                                  much?
 Here are some places to visit on the web 
                                  to feed your spindle frenzy
 
 - 
                                  Spindlicity,
 an online spindle spinning magazine
 - Spindlitis 
                                  Yahoo group
 - Spindlers 
                                  Yahoo group
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                            Four (of the many) spindle 
                          vendors on the web that are great at walking you 
                          through your first spindle purchase are Bosworth Spindles and 
                          Grafton 
                          Fibers if you want to buy from the spindle 
                          artist and The Bellwether and Carolina 
                          Homespun if you want a vendor that sells a 
                          variety of spindle artists.  
                          
                          You've bought your spindle and 
                          starter fiber and they are staring you in the face.  
                          Where to learn how to spindle?  A few great books 
                          are Spindle Spinning from Novice to Expert by 
                          Connie Delaney, Spin It by Lee Raven and High 
                          Whorling by Patricia Gibson-Roberts (out of print 
                          but available at many spinning retailers and libraries).  
                          This On the web try www.icanspin.com or the  
                          (Spin off magazine website 
                          )   Or find one of those "spindle people" 
                          at a spinning guild or spinning shop.  
                          
                          Pick up a spindle.  
                          You'll be surprised how fun and relaxing it really 
                          is.  You might even start looking at your 
                          knitting as sucking away your spindle time. 
                              | New 
                                  to spinning? Practice as little 
                                as 15 minutes every day. You'll be a spinning 
                                maniac in a week.
 Or want 
                                  to get better at spinning with a spindle?
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                        |   Rebecca supports her fiber 
                            habit as a children's librarian in Dearborn, MI. A 
                            long-time spindler, she finally broke down and bought 
                            a wheel about 4 years ago and finally learned to knit 
                            about 6 years ago. Her husband demanded she do something 
                            with the yarn she was making.
 Rebecca still 
                            packs a spindle almost everywhere she goes and can 
                            be found addicting, um, instructing spindlers with 
                            the Spinners' Flock in Chelsea, MI.  |   
                        | text © 2006 Rebecca 
                          Hermen, photos © 2006 Jillian Moreno. Contact Rebecca |  |