I drove out to Wellsville, MO this morning for a farm auction. A photo of a small gypsy-style wheel, likely German, caught my eye. Unfortunately I wasn't the only one bidding on it, and it went for way more than I had budgeted. But I did snap some photos for my own edification.
It was a very small wheel - maybe a 10" drive wheel - with a small footprint. It would have needed a bit of work to get spinning again, mainly fixing the split whorl and adding new treadle leather. And the bobbin was fused to the whorl... a bit of elbow grease to loosen that up. It did come with an extra bobbin and a half, which is very rare for old wheels. It had been painted, too - in reds, yellows and blacks. Hopefully the couple that got it can restore it and keep the remaining paint intact.
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Acrylic - Not My Favorite
Working with acrylic makes just about everything else seem like butter. It is hard on my tools and I'm not a fan of the smell. But when it's all nice and shiny... it's amazing.
Off the lathe recently...
Quick rehash of recent run/walking... still trying to figure out why I can't run well recently:
Sat., Aug 25: 3.5mi walk during Clean Stream event
Sun., Aug: 26: 5.5 mi walk
Week of Aug. 27: 5.25 mi Tuesday, 5 mi Wednesday, 5.55 mi Friday, 5.25 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 3: 4.3 mi Tuesday, 5.25 mi Wednesday, 5 mi Friday, 6.2 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 10: 5.3 mi Tuesday, 5 mi Wednesday, 5.05 mi Saturday, 5.2 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 17: 5.35 mi Tuesday, 5.25 mi Wednesday, 5 mi Friday.
Off the lathe recently...
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| Pacific Yew on left, blue acrylic (for Paul) on right |
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| Bottom two - various laminated woods, top is acrylic |
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| Shiny needle cases in acrylic (available on my Etsy site) |
Sat., Aug 25: 3.5mi walk during Clean Stream event
Sun., Aug: 26: 5.5 mi walk
Week of Aug. 27: 5.25 mi Tuesday, 5 mi Wednesday, 5.55 mi Friday, 5.25 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 3: 4.3 mi Tuesday, 5.25 mi Wednesday, 5 mi Friday, 6.2 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 10: 5.3 mi Tuesday, 5 mi Wednesday, 5.05 mi Saturday, 5.2 mi Sunday
Week of Sept. 17: 5.35 mi Tuesday, 5.25 mi Wednesday, 5 mi Friday.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Praise for Icelandic Sheep
Fast-forward to working on my Master Spinner Program level-one homework. Part of it is a breed study, where you select 10 breeds, start with raw fleece, and work your way through scouring, prepping, spinning, and a small knitted sample. I tried to spread my breed selections out across a wide range of sheep (and fleece) types. One we had gotten samples of in class was Navajo Churro, and I knew I had more at home so I'd have enough to include that one. Except... my own stash of 4oz was nowhere to be found.
So. On to a substitution. To stay within the same type, I looked at other sheep with primitive or dual-coated fleeces, and decided on Icelandic. The sheep themselves are cute as all get-out, and I wanted to see if my initial impression of that commercial roving was correct or not.
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| Photo from ncwga.org |
Icelandic sheep first ended up in Iceland thanks to the Vikings, who brought along sheep belonging to the Northern European short-tailed sheep family way back in the ninth and tenth century. There has been little change or 'improvement' during the intervening years... intentionally. They are hardy, intelligent little sheep that apparently tend to exhibit a bit of personality.
In Iceland, most of the income from these sheep comes from the meat trade. But the wool fiber is highly valued too, both there and around the world. The fleece has two layers... an outer coat called tog, which is longer and coarser. The undercoat, thel, is short and soft. They can be spun together, but often the coats are separated. The tog can be spun for stronger fiber needed for durable items, while the thel can be soft enough to use for next-to-skin items.
For class, I got both a lamb fleece and an adult fleece. The lamb fleece is incredibly soft, and I'll likely spin both coats together.
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| Lamb fleece |
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| Staples from lamb fleece |
The adult fleece has better definition between tog and thel and I'll be separating those coats out for spinning.
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| Adult fleece |
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| Staples from adult fleece (those boards are 6" wide) |
Both fleeces are from Sunrise Sheep and Wool, and I highly recommend them - they are in lovely shape.
Monday, August 27, 2012
I Guess it Had to Happen...
If you own a lathe, you have to make a pen. I think that's written down somewhere. But, after making a bunch of spinning tools, I finally made pens. And a stylus with a pen inside.
I also made some new needle holders, and additional stylus-pens - they're all up on my Etsy site, RiverPoet Fiber and Yarn.
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| Acrylic stylus/pen at top, then Canarywood, and Bois de Rose. |
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| Quilted Maple needle holder |
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| Figured Pyinma stylus with telescoping pen |
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Run for Your Lives
We went, we ran, we died. :-)
The
'Run for Your Lives' 5K was billed as an obstacle course where you are
also chased by zombies. Sounded fun! There was a steep entry fee, but
seeing everything they had to bring in and set up, I can understand it
better in hindsight. There was also a $10 parking fee,
but... Subarus got to park for free. Heh.
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| The future undead. |
Waves
went off every half-hour, to spread the people out on the course. It
was partly open fields (DUST), partly wooded trails that seemed to have
recently been made or widened with a DR brush mower (DUST and root
snags). Oh, and the obstacles and zombies. Some zombies just shuffled
around, but others actively tried to grab one of the three flags on your
flag-football-style belt. No flags at the end = dead and zombiefied
after you cross the finish line.
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| Mah flags - now you see them, soon you won't. |
The obstacles
included sandwich-board-style walls to climb over, then wood beams to go
under; a shack-type thing with a maze inside that also had zombies in
it; a slimy mud pit; another shack-type thing you climbed into where it
was dark inside... the piped-in "fog" didn't help... and electrified
wires hanging from the ceiling. (I made it through that one OK, but Paul
got zapped several times.) Near the end there was a large structure to
climb with a water slide down the other side, little wooden things you
had to crawl through on your knees in the mud, and then last you had to
slide under, flat on your stomach, some horizontal chain link fence that
they said was electrified, but I hit it twice with my head and nothing
happened.
Live people are eligible for
time-based awards, and dead aren't, but we all got the same medal. Theoretically there were "health packs" on the course with additional flags, but neither of us saw any sign of one. Not
that I was in competition for an award anyway! So no matter. Stand in a
long line for a cold shower with about 40 of your best friends, with
water pumped direct from a tanker truck, and try to discreetly rinse out
the mud that got INSIDE your shorts. Muddy shoes got dumped in a large
pile - they'd be cleaned up and re-purposed through Project Sole.
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| See mine? They're right there... near the top... |
All
in all it was a lot of fun. I did pop my bad hamstring again... we'll
see how long that takes to heal. Right now I have to lift my left leg to
go up stairs and can't sit for very long - it's that spot right at the
top where the hamstring attaches to your butt. Painful to sit at all.
And my bad right shoulder is sore, probably from grabbing the tree to
break my fall, when I dodged a zombie, caught a root with my toe, and
torqued the hamstring.
But the zombies were all
made up professionally by the race production company, and most of them
looked pretty darn convincing. They did put a LOT of work into making
the race happen. Advice to anyone who wants to do it, if they have it
here again: take an early wave start. :-)
Oh, and remember the rules:
1. Cardio
2. Doubletap
3. Beware of bathrooms
Since I probably will take a week or so off to let the hammie heal up...
Wed., 8/1: 5.5 mi
Friday: 5.5 mi
Sunday: 5.35 mi
Tues. 8/7: 5.5mi
Wednesday: 5 mi
Friday: 5.5 mi run, 1 mi dog-walk
Sunday: 7 mi
Tues., 8/14: 5.5 mi
Wednesday: 5.25 mi
Friday: 5.5 mi
Saturday: 5K zombie run, plus walking... total 5 mi
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Back to School
I'm way overdue for a report, so... here it is!
The last week of July I was up in Michigan for spinner's camp... or more formally, the Olds College Master Spinner Program Level 1. Last fall, I heard that The Spinning Loft in Howell, MI was going to start hosting the classes. As that's about 30 minutes from Ann Arbor, I could stay with my family and drive up for class, getting a nice visit and some education all at the same time. I was able to get registered for it (there was quite the demand!), and made plans to head up.
Because of the extensive supply list, I was glad I was able to drive. Even though I have my cute new travel wheel, the rest of the gear would have needed to be shipped ahead if I had flown. For the record - it is 546 miles one-way from my house to Mom and Dad's.
I went up early so we could pay homage to the Art Fair (three fairs in one, and MUCH bigger than it used to be), and hang out with family. Then on Monday the 23rd, I drove up for my first day of class. We had instruction from 9am to 4pm all week, plus homework most nights, and rarely were we done by 4pm. Great classmates, wonderful instructor (Coleen Nimetz), lots to do and practice, and surrounded by raw fleece and fiber toys. What a great way to spend a 'vacation'!
We sorted fleece, we spun different ways, we dyed many the things... and this was all to get us ready for our homework/self-study. I've got a big list of things to complete before I can sent my notebooks in for grading. (And I'm sure I'll be posting about it more as I complete assignments.) It will be a fun and busy autumn, and I'm already looking forward to continuing on to Level 2 some time next year - I'll be signing up as soon as it's posted.
The last week of July I was up in Michigan for spinner's camp... or more formally, the Olds College Master Spinner Program Level 1. Last fall, I heard that The Spinning Loft in Howell, MI was going to start hosting the classes. As that's about 30 minutes from Ann Arbor, I could stay with my family and drive up for class, getting a nice visit and some education all at the same time. I was able to get registered for it (there was quite the demand!), and made plans to head up.
Because of the extensive supply list, I was glad I was able to drive. Even though I have my cute new travel wheel, the rest of the gear would have needed to be shipped ahead if I had flown. For the record - it is 546 miles one-way from my house to Mom and Dad's.
| Nope - still didn't step on it. |
| Fleece drying outside the shop. |
| A bit chaotic, but that's half the fun! And that's Tess up front. |
We sorted fleece, we spun different ways, we dyed many the things... and this was all to get us ready for our homework/self-study. I've got a big list of things to complete before I can sent my notebooks in for grading. (And I'm sure I'll be posting about it more as I complete assignments.) It will be a fun and busy autumn, and I'm already looking forward to continuing on to Level 2 some time next year - I'll be signing up as soon as it's posted.
| The class of 2018 with Coleen! |
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Quickie Running Update
It's been so bloody hot here - usually in the 70s at 5:30am, and humidity so thick it feels like breathing under water. But, still getting out there. I had a brief interruption when I went to Michigan last week and was in class all day and had homework at night. Oh, and some weird knee pain in my right leg. But plenty of rest has the knee better, even if the STL weather still sucks rocks.
Hey summer... are we done yet?
Sat., June 30: 5.3 mi walk in 1:14:31
Tues., July 3: 6.0 mi in 1:08:16
Wed.: 6.25 mi run/walk in 1:23:36
Fri.: 5.25 mi in 1:04:07
Sun.: 6.25 mi run/walk in 1:22:55
Tues., July 10: 6.0 mi in 1:08:11 (5 mi = 56:40)
Wed.: 5.55 mi in 1:04:59
Fri.: 6.0 mi in 1:08:40 (5 mi = 57:40)
Sat.: 5.5 mi walk in 1:18:49 (5 mi = 1:11:11)
Sun.: 3.1 mi (5K) on the ELM in 43:30
Tues., July 17: 5.5 mi in 1:05:40
Wed.: 5.2 mi in 1:02:29
Fri.: 5.0 mi in Ann Arbor
Sat.: walked 4.5 mi around Art Fair
Sun.: 7.0 mi run/walk at Gallup Park in Ann Arbor
Sat., July 28: 1.5 mi walk with Mom and Madi
Tues., July 31: 5.25 mi back in STL
Oh, you'll notice I stopped recording times. It's hot, and they suck, so no point!
Hey summer... are we done yet?
Sat., June 30: 5.3 mi walk in 1:14:31
Tues., July 3: 6.0 mi in 1:08:16
Wed.: 6.25 mi run/walk in 1:23:36
Fri.: 5.25 mi in 1:04:07
Sun.: 6.25 mi run/walk in 1:22:55
Tues., July 10: 6.0 mi in 1:08:11 (5 mi = 56:40)
Wed.: 5.55 mi in 1:04:59
Fri.: 6.0 mi in 1:08:40 (5 mi = 57:40)
Sat.: 5.5 mi walk in 1:18:49 (5 mi = 1:11:11)
Sun.: 3.1 mi (5K) on the ELM in 43:30
Tues., July 17: 5.5 mi in 1:05:40
Wed.: 5.2 mi in 1:02:29
Fri.: 5.0 mi in Ann Arbor
Sat.: walked 4.5 mi around Art Fair
Sun.: 7.0 mi run/walk at Gallup Park in Ann Arbor
Sat., July 28: 1.5 mi walk with Mom and Madi
Tues., July 31: 5.25 mi back in STL
Oh, you'll notice I stopped recording times. It's hot, and they suck, so no point!
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