Friday, September 14, 2012

Have you any wool?

Did a bit more shopping (and now I MUST STOP ... unless I run across a great deal at a fiber festival), got myself a pair of barely-used wool carding paddles (documentable!) and that black Shetland fleece I mentioned earlier.  And a copy of A History of Hand Knitting, but that's still in transit from the UK.  Naturally, the first thing I did upon receiving my box-o-sheepy-goodness was to spread the raw fleece out in my living room floor.  I'm now slowly picking through the wool by hand to separate the longer, coarser outer coat from the downy under-coat.  Still looking for specific information about how fleece was cleaned and scoured in-period, but in the meantime a cold water soak to loosen some of the dirt and vegetable debris won't hurt.

I have established a line of communication with a shepherd in the UK who raises coloured Ryeland sheep (documentable!) and is willing to ship raw fleeces to the US.  Alas, due to unforeseen veterinary expenses (the dog is fine, btw, just having some itchy skin issues that seem to be clearing up), and the cost of shipping something as large as an adult fleece I'll have to wait until the spring shearing before I can have one sent over.  In the meantime, I'll carry on with my Shetland substitute, and see if I can convince the Husbeast that starting a small fiber flock is an awesome idea.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

SHOPPING!!!

So, guess what I just bought?

Guess?

GUESS!!!

My very own spinning wheel, that's what.

It's not a beautiful hand-crafted wooden wheel - it's not even new, and needs a replacement drive band and a bit of a clean-up.  But it's mine.  And a heck of a steal, too, $85, shipping included.

I'm also communicating with a Shetland sheep breeder about purchasing some raw black fleece.  I've looked and looked, trying to find a good deal on Ryeland wool for my medieval caps project, but haven't had any luck.  Shetland seems to be a reasonable substitution, as far as wool characteristics are concerned, and is more readily available in the US market.

So basically I'm turning a knitting design project into a more expansive meta project - preparing fibers, spinning and plying, and finally cap production and finishing.  It will be a big project, and I will be moving to a different city sometime in the middle of it all, but this is what currently makes my socks roll up and down, so here's to jumping in the deep end!

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

And they called it Chiengora

In case you haven't already noticed, I'm just the tiniest bit insane.  Today, to illustrate this fact, I am preparing fur harvested from my dog, Max, to spin into yarn.  So far, I've soaked it in a small tub with nice-smelling shampoo and cold water, then rinsed and rinsed until the water ran clear.  Now I'm off to drain off the last bit of water and set the fur out in the sun to dry.  Tomorrow I will card the fluff using a pair of slicker brushes ($2 - $3 apiece, so not a huge investment if you would like to try your hand at carding fiber for spinning) and pre-draft it into pencil roving to spin at the earliest convenience.

I've also harvested fur from Nina, our Australian Shepherd.  Her undercoat is a blend of tan, grey and black, while Max's is a more uniform fawn color.  I may spin singles from both dogs and then ply the contrasting singles together.  I don't imagine I'll have enough yarn to make anything substantial, but to a spinner, sometimes a ball of unique yarn is its own reward.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Brown Monmouth - FINISHED

Knitting the latest Monmouth went fairly quickly ... at least, until the time came for the three-needle-bind-off.  There's a lesson in this.  I took my very-nearly-finished hat to the event where my apprenticeship was announced,* but I failed to pack along a set of one-size-smaller DPNs to do the bind-off.  Trying to do this thing with all the needles the same size is a MAJOR PAIN and I do not recommend it.

So I got frustrated and put it back in the basket.  And it sat in the basket for two months while I happily cranked out socks and perused mundane sweater patterns and did everything in my power to avoid making eye contact with that frustrating little wad of wool.  But I finally shamed myself into picking up the right needle.  And whaddayaknow, I practically flew through the last bit of bind-off and the icord loop.  All that was left was to felt and block it.  I don't know if I got the agitation motions down faster this time, or if the wool was simply more enthusiastic about the process than the oatmeal-colored stuff, but it seemed to take no time at all for the material to firm up.

Right!  ...  So now I get to jimmy around with my documentation ...  Woo?

* If you read my sewing blog, this is no surprise.  I'm belted to Mistress Margot du Bois, who is awesome.  This was back in April.

ALSO, since this is a hat-related post, the Museum of London has uploaded SEVENTY-THREE sixteenth-century caps, cap linings, and fragments to their online collection.  You can follow the link here ... and if it doesn't automatically give you 73 knitted caps, just type "cap" in the searchy box.  I was tickled pink by the lovely earflap caps, particularly because that's one of the next items on my to-do list.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Catharsis

Mundane life of late has been a bit of a headache.  Thank goodness for fiber arts to give me a little distraction, stress relief, and a sense that I'm accomplishing something useful and tangible.  I finished my second pair of knee-high socks - I had a brain fart during the toe wedge and forgot how to m1 without creating a hole, but rather than rip back to the beginning, these are now a "ventilation feature".  I wore them during a visit home to celebrate my sister's graduation from university, and she and my mom accepted my offer to make them each a pair of crew socks.

In spinning news, I ordered some roving from Knit Picks and some old wooden textile-mill bobbins from an Etsy seller.  Funny story - I asked for my husband's input when deciding which colors I wanted to order.  I had already settled on blue, but was waffling between a mossy green and a rich magenta/purple.  He argued that purple was the better color "because it has more blue".  Whatever.  I ordered all three in the end.  After a few sessions with this roving I can already see an improvement in the uniformity of the singles I'm spinning with my top-whorl spindle.

Life-to-fiber comparison: Sometimes it's nice for things to be soft and loose and fluffy.  Other times you need a little stress and tension and pent-up energy.  Then, in the end, when you get your head wrapped around everything, it all becomes balanced (with the help of a dip in a hot bath).

Thursday, April 19, 2012

New toys!

I now own a pair of drop spindles: one top whorl, the other bottom whorl. And the seller included a bit of roving to ensure that I'd get hooked.

It worked.

Pardon me while I part Mr. Max from his undercoat.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Well, duh.

I finished the outer shell of Monmouth #3 this morning and am now in the process of picking up a row of purl stitches inside the brim. I'm cheating a bit by picking up a few stitches on a DPN and transferring them to a circular needle, but it's still not a fun process.

(To be fair, my DPN set isn't long enough to accommodate all 120 stitches.)

The extant piece is knit at a larger gauge, so fewer stitches, fewer rows, and fewer pick-ups means much faster, less tedious work. The ability to quickly produce this in-demand item means more money for the local cappers' guild. I've found a chunky natural wool I'd like to order in the very near future. It knits at a slightly finer gauge than the wool used to produce the Nelson Museum's cap, but it's a heckuva lot closer than the worsted weight I'm using at present. When I get my hands on that yarn and some DPNs in the right size, I plan on doing a speed challenge, just to see how long it takes me to construct the hat from start to finish. Fulling not included :P

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Period source: Monmouth for women, too?


January Labors, from an early-16th century Flemish Book of Hours, attributed to Simon Bening. The woman in the lower right-hand corner appears to be wearing something rather like a dark grey Monmouth cap.

Let's zoom in for a closer look, shall we?


Perhaps!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Eureka?

Within the past ten minutes I've had a Thought, regarding the 3-needle bind-off at the brim edge of the extant Monmouth cap. I think the bind off would "point" in the opposite direction if the inner brim layer is the one being picked up ...

This calls for some experimentation.

Back-tracking

I'm wracking my brain, trying to remember what triggered this obsession with medieval and northern renaissance hats. And I'm drawing a blank. I know that it happened late October / early November of last year, and shortly thereafter I took the all-important first step into knitting in-the-round (an essential step for anyone desiring to replicate period knitwear). Don't know how I first stumbled across the Monmouth cap, but that's all the bait I needed to get absolutely hooked.

For those of you who haven't had to endure my process of exploresearch (heylookshiny), the only extant example of a sixteenth-century Monmouth cap is housed at the Nelson Museum in Monmouthshire, Wales. It is knit from a rather chunky wool, requiring less than sixty stitches to reach all the way around a 22" circumference head, and shows signs of fulling or felting, a process that makes the final product more water-repellant. It is somewhat like a modern beanie with a double-layered brim. The cap also features a loop at the bottom edge of the brim (perhaps used to hang the hat from a peg or a belt) and period text sources describe a "button" at the crown. There's some debate whether this was a functional button or just a bit of material that got bunched together when the final few stitches at the crown were gathered shut. This style of cap is documented from the late medieval period through the colonial period as a most useful item, commonly ordered in mass quantities to outfit soldiers, sailors, and settlers. Peasant laborers and nobles alike appreciated the cap's utility, and Shakespeare even included a blurb about Welshmen wearing leeks in their Monmouth caps on St. David's day.

Hm ... Maybe this just seemed like a really good idea, since winter was bearing down on us and my only knit cap was missing ...

For my first attempt at period capping, I used a mustard yellow, worsted weight wool-dominant blend (3% polyamide) yarn and size 7 knitting needles. It's not all that authentic. I double-knit the brim, then joined the two layers into a single layer for the crown. The "button" for this one was a short chain stitch loop, and I used the tail from the cast-on edge for another chain loop at the brim. I didn't full this cap, so it became a jumping-off point for later patterns.

053

For round two I referenced Jennifer Carlson's construction method. Since I didn't have any chunky wool yarn on hand, I used LB Fisherman's Wool worsted-weight yarn. After knitting and felting a test swatch of my wool, I determined that the felting process for that particular gauge has a negligible effect on the width, but shortens the length by about 20%. I did some quick calculations to determine how many extra rows I needed to add to my existing crown pattern to get a proper fit. I also added a few extra knit rows to make a round button on top. Oh, and I cheated to get the bottom edge to mimic the extant piece. Used a crochet hook to chain through the purl edge and make the loop.

024
(Cap #2, straight off the needles, with the brim folded down.)

016 012
(Same cap after felting.)

Wool needs a few things in order to felt: moisture, heat, alkalinity and agitation. I used a bathroom sink basin filled with hot water and a squirt of dish soap, a plastic slotted spoon and my hands. I added the hat to the hot, soapy water and stirred with the spoon until everything cooled off just enough that I wouldn't scald my hands. Then I rubbed the wool between my palms, alternating back-and-forth and circular motions over the entire surface area, re-wetting now and again. When the water got too cool, I emptied the sink, re-filled it and repeated the process. Once I felt the material was thickening up to my liking, I rolled a bath towel into a rough head-shape and put the cap over it to dry.

Since completing the second cap I've done some more reading in the Historic Knitter's group on Ravelry, and I've joined the Historic Knits Yahoo! list. I'm starting another cap, again using my worsted gauge, so I'll be following the general directions, not any stitch-for-stitch pattern. This involves picking up a row of stitches inside the brim for the inner layer after finishing the basic cap. Once the inner brim layer is the same length as the outer layer, I'll join them together using a three-needle bind-off for the edge treatment.

Friday, March 30, 2012

It's a Spin-off!

Welcome to my new off-shoot project, a companion to Mathilde's Sewing Box.
Lately I've been doing a good bit of investigation into historic knitting and I decided this would be a good tool to help me organize (as much is possible, given my rather "cluttered" nature) my thoughts and keep track of my sources.
For the next several months I will be focusing on knitted hats and caps from the late Medieval period, trying to produce finished objects that look and behave like those in period imagery and extant items in museum collections.
I invite you all to share in my insanity - it really can be quite fun!