29 May 2009

You spin me right round, baby.

This past week, I deviated a bit from my goal of "one project, start to finish, every week." But some projects are worth an extra week or two, especially if you're starting from scratch. So last week, while Jason was out of the house for an evening of Ticket to Ride with some friends, I stayed home, put on Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2, and did some spinning. I got the tension on my spinning wheel just right and ended up with some of the most beautiful, delicate, even, 2-ply hand-spun yarn ever, if I do say so myself. Okay, maybe not ever, but still pretty dang good. Now all I need is a week or two at home to gather some plants and make some dye in a cast iron pot over a fire in the backyard. Then, once the wool is dry, I need a solid couple of days (and some patience) to sit down with Amy or my mom and actually learn how to knit something other than straight knit-stitch scarves. I don't really enjoy the knitting part, which is probably why I stopped at the yarn-making step last week.
But I do very much enjoy spinning. The gentle rhythm of my double treadle, the changing texture as I stretch the soft roving and feel it tighten under my fingers as it spins, the tension of hold and release as the yarn is pulled onto the bobbin, the reminder that I will produce good results if I can just keep my feet from speeding too quickly ahead. It's simple, therapeutic, relaxing work.
I forget all that when I let the wheel rest too long gathering dust in my living room. It becomes a mere decoration, an accessory. My eyes glance over it as something that naturally belongs in my home because I grew up with spinning wheels in the living room, on the bend in the staircase, in my mother's bedroom, in the barn. I'm always surprised when guests come over, and that is one of the first things they comment on. "What is that? Is that a spinning wheel? Like in Rumpelstiltskin? Can you work it?" It makes me grateful for my parents, the rich tradition of craftsmanship they raised me in, the value they placed on taking the time to start from scratch, and the skills that they taught me to honor and preserve history with my hands.

8 comments:

  1. oh how i wish i could spin my own yarn! that really is an amazing skill to have passed down from your parents. how wonderful!
    i have tried many times to love knitting but it just never stuck. i just started crocheting recently and i'm hooked (ohhhh bad joke...)i find it much more relaxing and highly recommend it!!

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  2. I learned to crochet a couple months ago and really enjoyed it but then let it drop, and now I can't figure it out again! How sad is that!

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  3. No school like the old school. :o)

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  4. I beat "Loom" once in elementary school.

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  5. Sorry, Teetsel. I don't know what that is. :o/

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  6. I used the Stitch N' Bitch: Happy Hooker book to teach myself to crochet. Sketchy title, great book. She explains things very well. I just felt very innapropriate when I had to pick it up on hold at the library!

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  7. I have that book! (The knitting one is good, too.) I just need to sit down with it and give it more than 3 minutes before I give up and throw my hook across the room. :o/

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