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Mar 01
2007
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These arrived in the mail yesterday but I was too busy playing with them to bother taking pictures and blogging. I ordered these through Three Bags Full in Vancouver last week and was not expecting them until Friday at the earliest. It was so exciting to discover that there was a box waiting for me when I got home yesterday.I am the proud owner of two beautiful top-whorl spindles. The tags on them are a little difficult to interpret but as far as I can tell one is a 17 gram “lace” weight spindle made of Padauk wood and the other is a 38 gram “Dervish” weight spindle of Pecan wood. Based on some quick google searches for “dervish spindle” I think my spindles are from Houndesign, also in Vancouver. The grey yarn on the little spindle is from my playing around yesterday.

Lace weight spindle

When I ordered my spindles I also ordered some wool roving to spin up with them. Since I was ordering over the phone I pretty much let the girl in the shop surprise me once I’d approved a price. I like the colour I got - “Summer in Alberta”. It’s really a bunch of different colours mixed together so I think it will have a very even appearance when I spin it up and ply it. I haven’t decided what it should be yet. I’m contemplating a lace weight two-ply for another shawl.

I also got a book to help me figure out what I’m supposed to be doing with my new toys - Spin to Knit by Shannon Okey. I read through a bunch of it last night and it’s really good. There are plenty of pictures to show what’s supposed to be happening and explanations of different methods of plying and other fun things you can do with your handspun yarn. The second half of the book is a variety of patterns that can be made partially or entirely with handspun yarn in various weights. There are also little biographies of many spinners who have contributed or inspired the patterns.
I got some needles too (when I sorted out my vacation shopping I realized I’d gotten yarn for some projects but had nothing to knit them with). They are Crystal Palace needles (my first from them). They feel very nice but don’t have the size marked in millimetres (and according the Crystal Palace a 7mm needles is US size 10¾?). I think I need to get one of those tools scientists use to measure diameters to keep in my knitting bag. I can’t remember what they are called - something-o-meter I expect - but I remember using them in physics labs at university and they would be very handy when it comes to accurately measuring knitting needles. Anybody know?