This column is about
                            my journey in learning to spin without wool
                            or any other 4-legged animal fiber, using the
                            same tools as everyone else. 
                          
                        So it seems I went away.  
                        Not on purpose. Not as a result
                          of any grand plan, but because I was in way over
                          my head. And I'm not talking about how high the
                          yarn is piled in my office. 
                        When last we spoke in this
                          column, it was about the purchase
                          of my first spinning wheel.
                          And then I went suspiciously silent. What happened? 
                        Several things. 
                        First, let's look at what I
                          was able to spin on the Joy with a few basic
                          lessons from some kind spinner friends: 
                          
                        That is what can legitimately
                          be called soy fiber Yarn Barf, and it's the best
                          I could do, no matter how patient my teachers
                          were with me or how much I practiced. Enduring
                          the constant wheel stoppage because my too-thin
                          yarn broke or I hadn't put in enough twist and
                          it all pulled apart was really discouraging.
                          And then there was the tick. 
                        I didn't notice the tick of
                          the wheel [one audible "tick" for each revolution
                          of the wheel itself] until I was spinning with
                          some friends. Jen also has a Joy, and hers was
                          blissfully silent. But mine annoyingly ticked
                          with each revolution, and it was just another
                          thing holding me back from getting into the spinning
                          groove. 
                        Jen's husband, Jason, came
                          to my rescue that night. It involved a hammer,
                          a heavy set of pliers and loud banging noises
                          of metal against metal. When he was done, my
                          Joy was silent too! [It seems the little very-rigid
                          metal bar that joins the footmen to each other
                          was slightly bent in the wrong direction and
                          was making contact where it shouldn't have been.
                          He fixed it and I haven't had a problem since.                           
                        
                          Lesson learned: A spinning
                            wheel isn't made of porcelain. It's a tool and
                            it needs to function as expected. A quick visual
                            inspection of the wheel and the tick showed
                            Jason what was rubbing against what, and it
                            was a simple, if loud, fix. Be brave and embrace
                            the hammer and pliers if that's what you need
                            to do! 
                         
                        So I should have been
                            spinning better and better yarn after that,
                            right? No. I was so mentally stuck in the "I'm
                            just not getting this" groove
                          that I couldn't shake myself out. When you're
                          surrounded by spinners doing what you want to
                          do – seemingly effortlessly – and
                          you're making little to no progress, it's hard
                          to keep yourself motivated. It didn't matter
                          that they were spinning wool and I couldn't.
                          I just wasn't getting any better and I was losing
                          patience, and worse -- motivation. 
                        I was at a loss about how to get myself out
                          of this rut, until the brochure for SOAR [Interweave
                          Press' Spin Off Autumn Retreat] came across my
                          desk. My solution was staring me in the face: 
                          Maggie Casey -- Spinning 101: Learn to
                          Spin or Refresh Your Skills  
                        Maggie Casey – the
                            woman who taught Jillian [the editor of Knittyspin]
                          how to spin? Really? A three-day workshop just
                          to learn to spin? Perfect! I read further. 
                        
                          "… If you have always wanted to
                            spin, have taught yourself a little, or haven’t
                            spun for awhile, this workshop will be just
                            what you need to gain confidence and skill.
                            We will start with a beautiful
                            fleece, learn
                            to card, spin, ply, and set the twist. Then
                            we will spin woolen and worsted yarns, some
                            commercially prepared fibers and discuss wheel
                            maintenance." 
                         
                        
                          
                            | *My
                                fibers: cotton, hemp, linen, silk, soy,
                                bamboo, corn, milk or anything else that
                                never grew out of the skin of an animal.
                                I'm allergic to wool and sensitive to the
                                tiny barbs on all animal fibers, so I just
                            don't use any of it, in spinning or knitting.  | 
                           
                         
                        Oh, crap. Almost every
                            detail is just what I need, except that the
                            class is based on using wool. I am, as usual
                            when it comes to spinning, out of luck. I call
                            Jillian. "I want to
                          take Maggie Casey's workshop at SOAR, but it's
                          all wool-based." Jillian laughs. "Call
                          Maggie. Ask her if she'll do it with your fibers*." I
                          hesitate. Call the teacher? The legendary Maggie
                          Casey? Ask her to accommodate my specific
                          fiber limitations in a class full of [probably]
                          wool lovers? "Do it," Jillian said,
                          rather forcefully. 
                        So I did. Maggie was
                            not only sweet and friendly, she was encouraging
                            and enthusiastic. "Sure!" she
                          said. "We can do it with your fibers."  
                        
                          Lesson
                            learned: you get nowhere in life without asking.
                            Ask, especially if you are
                            non-woolly like me and want to participate in
                            the usually woolly spinning world. You'd be surprised
                            at how many instructors are willing to accommodate
                            you! 
                         
                        And
                          so it was arranged. I was going to SOAR, the
                          legendary fiber retreat, to learn how to spin
                          once and for all.  
                          How do I describe SOAR?
                            It's spinning camp for adults. It's 3-6 days
                            of intensive learning, plus at least one day
                            of intensive and pleasurable fiber shopping.
                          It's a retreat, a workshop, a break from reality.
                          It's where old friends meet each year, and new
                          friends are made. Really, camp for adults, courtesy
                          of Interweave Press [the people who organize
                          it every year] and your own bank account [it's
                          not an inexpensive excursion].  
                        The first three
                          days are the Workshop – three dedicated
                          days with one mentor on one subject. The last
                          two are the Retreat [two sessions a day with
                          any of a selection of Mentors on a variety of
                          fiber-related subjects]. In the middle, there's
                          the big market day where spinners stock up on
                          fiber and tools for the season to come.  
                        So in early October, I packed
                          the Ashford
                          Joy in the carry case [that's it
                          <-- over there on the left, tidily folded up
                          for travel] and was off to learn with the cool
                          kids. For those who wonder -- and I was one of
                          them until this trip --  the
                            Joy fits easily in any airplane's overhead
                            compartment, even a tiny 3-seat-across Embraer
                            jet. It was a real relief to be able to carry
                            my wheel with me, knowing it wouldn't get lost
                            or damaged in transit unless I was a doof and
                          dropped it. 
                          Rather
                          than give you a recap of my entire trip, let's
                          just say that the social aspects of SOAR were
                          everything I could have hoped for. It was a serious
                          blast and I had an amazing time. How could I
                          not enjoy myself at a place where it's socially
                          acceptable -- encouraged, even -- to spindle
                          while waiting for dinner to be served?  Everyone
                          over there on the right -->
                          looks all serious, but  I think we were
                          all just concentrating really hard so we wouldn't
                          waste the roving. Especially since we were at
                          a cocktail/dinner reception, and the first round
                          of beverages had already been toasted with. 
                        But the reason I went was to
                          learn how to spin, so how did that go? 
                        On the first day, we walked
                          into a hotel suite and took our place in a big
                          circle, our wheels in front of us. Maggie introduced
                          herself and passed out the handouts. And then
                          she pulled out a huge, sexy charcoal fleece.  
                          
                          I smiled and pulled out
                          my knitting. I knew that not everything in class
                          could apply to me, and I was happy to listen
                          and learn. Maggie talked about sheep breeds
                          and wool and fleece and other things, and then
                          she got to carding.  
                        Everyone grabbed a big hunk
                          of fleece and got to work. Maggie handed me…hemp. 
                        Seriously. Hemp? My first fiber to learn to
                          spin is hemp? Okay, then.  
                        I took the handcards
                            that Maggie offered – the
                          same tooth density as wool cards – and
                          began to imitate what everyone else was doing,
                          except instead of soft fluff, I was loading my
                          hand cards with crazy stiff plant material. I
                          surprised myself by turning off the normal skepticism
                          neurons in my brain; I was there, Maggie was
                          the expert and I was going to learn
                          whatever she could teach me. I kept my mouth
                          shut [uncharacteristically], listened and
                          watched intently. 
                         I mimicked
                          the rocking motion Maggie was teaching us and…it
                          started to work. What I was creating was enough
                          like what everyone else was making that I could
                          follow along with them and keep up. As everyone
                          made woolly rolags, I made hempy ones.  
                          
                        Then
                          Maggie got us all set up to spin. She made sure
                          our leaders were suitable, and showed us how
                          to attach them to the bobbins in a special way
                          that wouldn't come loose when
                          it was time to spin. Extremely cool. Everyone
                          else used, of course, wool. I used a two-ply
                          linen cord that Maggie gave me, and found it
                          fabulously grippy and an excellent choice. She
                          made sure our wheels were all correctly set --
                          because "it's always the wheel's fault" when
                          a new spinner can't make yarn. 
                        Then we began
                          to spin, woolen, from our rolags. I watched everyone
                          else go first, seeing how they did it and trying
                          to get the motions in my head. Then it was my
                          turn. And it worked. I was able to spin
                          hemp woolen [softly, with lots of air in it].
                          It felt like a miracle. Sure, it wasn't truly
                          soft yarn, but I was spinning just like everyone
                          else in the room! The yarn wasn't breaking every
                          two seconds. I was filling a bobbin! 
                          While
                          Maggie went around the room helping those who
                          needed it, I tried something.  First,
                          I loaded the carder evenly with a little less
                          hemp than the first time. Then I added pure white
                          bamboo roving evenly over the top of the hemp
                          -->.  
                         
                                                When
                          I carded the two very different fibers together,
                          I was pleased to see that the sheen of the bamboo
                          evened out and softened the hemp, and the hemp
                          had enough tooth to keep the bamboo from slipping
                          off the carder's teeth. A few moments later,
                          I had a hemp/bamboo rolag.  
                        Rather than agonizing
                          over how it would spin [would it spin at all?],
                          I just went for it. It spun. It was working!
                          Once again, the bamboo's smoothness made the
                          rough hemp more enjoyable to spin, the the hemp
                          kept the bamboo from being a slippery mess. I
                          was making yarn. Maggie came over
                          to see what I was doing, examined my work and
                          gave her approval.  
                          I
                          spent the rest of the day making rolag after
                          rolag of hemp/bamboo, and then spinning them,
                          marveling at what I'd learned on just this first
                          day and feeling encouraged for the first time
                          in my very short spinning history. By mid-afternoon,
                          I'd filled a good portion of two bobbins and
                          then it was time to ply. Maggie showed us how
                          and then it was our turn. My hemp/bamboo yarn
                          plied <-- pretty evenly, especially for a beginner.
                          I couldn't stop smiling.  
                         
                                                  That night, before I fell asleep, I imagined
                          the different things I could card together and
                          what they might look like. 
                        Day two arrived and, let's
                          be honest, I was sore all over. A full day of
                          spinning is hard on anybody's body, and mine
                          was suffering. My hands ached, my back hurt and
                          I wasn't sure I'd survive the day. But within
                          an hour of the beginning of class, I had forgotten
                          all that and was into it again with a happy vengeance.                           
                          We
                          soon moved to worsted spinning, which, I learned,
                          was what I'd been sort of doing on my own 
                          with all the slippery fibers I was trying to
                          spin -- bamboo, soy, silk. It
                          was a quick transition to worsted spinning for
                          me after Maggie's thorough lesson the
                          day before. I was happy to see that the breaking
                          and stopping wasn't happening nearly as often
                          as it had before.  
                         
                                                By
                          the end of the day, I'd spun up 5.5 ounces of
                          deep grey bamboo roving into a rather nice worsted
                          single. My singles now had a lot less overspinny
                          twisties than before and way fewer thick parts
                          with not enough spin. 
                         I let the twist sit on
                          the bobbin overnight and Navajo plied it the
                          next morning. It was thick, shimmery, 3-ply bamboo
                          yarn, just like I'd wanted to spin. Not perfect
                          yarn, but absolutely, unequivocally yarn and
                          definitely knittable. That night, my friend Carla
                          taught me to Andean ply, and this time, it stuck.
                          I started madly plying off all the hanky singles
                          I'd ever spun and just staring at the
                          little 2-ply hanks I was producing. 
                          After
                          that, something clicked on in my brain. I finally
                          gave myself permission to call myself a spinner.
                          No more qualifying adjectives or apologies. I
                          was just a new spinner, like every other new
                          spinner, with a learning curve ahead of me, but
                          no longer an insurmountable one. I was giddy
                          with the possibilities. 
                         I walked around SOAR
                          with my handspindle and a bag of silk hankies
                          and spun and Andean plied like mad. I could be
                          spotted in the halls wearing a halo of whatever
                          I'd just spun resting happily on my head. Those
                          <-- are some silk hankies I'd bought on SOAR
                          market day and just spun and plied up the final
                          evening's Spin-In party.                           
                        Below you see my idol, Maggie
                          Casey, talking with me about the hankies I've
                          just plied [they're in that clear tube I'm holding]
                          and watching me beam with joy because she's helped
                          me become, in just three days, what all my friends
                          are. 
                          I
                            am a spinner, too. 
                        Postscript: It's a
                          month and a half later, and I'm still spinning
                          like mad on my handspindle, and have continued
                          to work on my wheel spinning. My wheel-spun bamboo
                          is getting better all the time.  
                        Two other unexpected things
                          resulted from my trip to SOAR: 
                           
                        1. a recurrence of my formerly dormant carpal
                        tunnel syndrome. It seems I was holding my fiber
                        not too tightly, but at too severe an angle for
                        my right wrist not to complain. Rest and following
                        my doctor's instructions have made this much, much
                        better since I returned home.  
                        
                          Lesson learned:
                            take care of your body, especially in such an intense
                            learning environment. 
                         
                        2. a new wheel. The spinner's
                          market was about more than fiber. A large number
                          of wheel manufacturers were there with wheels
                          for us to try. I manged to resist until the
                          very last afternoon, when I was firmly urged
                        to try the new Schacht
                        Ladybug wheel. Once I got
                          over that weird thing that new spinners have
                          about being watched, I got into my groove and
                          fell in love with the Ladybug and placed an order.                           
                        
                          Lesson learned: if you are easily tempted,
                            never spin on another wheel unless your wallet
                            is prepared to deal with the consequences. 
                         
                          So
                          now I have two wheels to talk about in this column,
                          both very different from the other. I'll have
                          more pictures of the yarn I'm spinning and more
                          Ashford and Schacht wheel talk in the next issue.  
                        But since I made you look at
                          my yarn barf, I should at least leave you with
                          something a little prettier. This is more than
                          100 yards of 2-ply bulky silk, spindle-spun from
                          hankies dyed by Nancy
                          Finn of Chasing Rainbows [colorway:
                          pansies]. 
                          
                        If you'd like to take lessons
                          from the wonderful Maggie Casey, you'll find
                          her at Shuttles,
                          Spindles & Skeins in Boulder,
                          Colorado.  |