A Finished Project

by The Spinning Guy

For the past almost a week, I’ve been working on finishing up a project last summer. I’ve been spinning up the remaining Mocha Swirl blend. This is a blend I created two or three years ago, but I’ve never worked with more than a sample.

This blend is 60% suri alpaca and 40% huacaya alpaca. The suri is not particularly good fiber – in fact the first time I spun the suri, my yarn approximated baling twine in texture, color, and oder. I have since learned to work with this batch of fiber. I wash it more. I make sure it’s well carded. I try to avoid folding the fiber because when it folds, it really pokes. In addition, there are buzzy bits in the suri – weak spots or partial shedding or something. I can’t card those out, so I have to work with them. One of the things I have discovered over the years is that this fiber does well when blended with huacaya. I can take not-very-good suri fiber, not-very-soft huacaya fiber, and achieve a yarn that feels softer than either of the input fibers.

I finished spinning the singles Thursday evening, and started plying. I kept plying and plying and plying. My legs started getting sore. The bobbin kept getting full. I did really well, not breaking a strand in plying.

The bobbin got really full. I wasn’t sure the yarn would all fit, but then one bobbin of singles ran out.

And I did a pretty good job of balancing the singles between the two bobbins.

I almost didn’t get the whole thing on one bobbin. If you look close, you can see light between the flyer and the yarn – in places. It was that close!

This evening, I pulled the yarn off the bobbin into a skein. Make that two skeins. After being so careful in the spinning and so careful in the plying and not breaking a strand, I broke the yarn while skeining it off the bobbin.

1132 yards. 12.4 ounces. Yes, I got it all on a single Louet bobbin and I almost got it all into one skein.

It’s spun fairly fine. As you can see in some of the pictures, it’s a rather hairy yarn. That’s a function of the fiber – and this yarn is a case of taking what the fiber gave me. I’m looking for a good project for the yarn. The yarn is uneven and has slubs, bumps, and a lot of hair. The project must work with those terms. You can see from the picture that the yarn is fairly fine. The suri content means the yarn won’t have a lot of memory, but ought to have great drape. I don’t want to be trying to rip this yarn back very much, so if it’s a knit project, it needs to be simple enough I don’t make a lot of mistakes. Any thoughts?

Mark the mocha swirl roving out of the stash. It’s yarn in need of a project. I spun one bobbin of singles and did all the plying in 2008, so I’ll credit myself with 6.2 ounces of spinning for the year.

1 comment

Comment from: Amy [Visitor] Email
AmyI recently saw your post on spinning suri and have been dong some of my own over the past few years. I've skipped the whole carding and combing process to find that I just like picking the fiber to loosen it into mounds of fluff and spinning it from there. This gives the fiber some body where it might be lacking if completely combed. It still drafts easily. I've since made several projects.
02/06/09 @ 17:24

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