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Handspinning Rare Wools Workshop
Learn to prepare and spin over 38 different rare wools with Deborah Robson.
.January 16, 2012.
Spinning Daily
22 rare breads + 1 passionate spinner = a very powerful yarn

Betsy Alspach cards while her twenty-year-old cat looks on. Betsy says the cat is her constant companion and loves fiber almost as much as she does.
 

We have invited Betsy Alspach, an occupational therapist from Falmouth, Massachusetts, to be our guest today to share with you her inspired skein from Deb Robson's Handspinning Rare Wools DVD. After watching the DVD and taking part in Deb's workshop at the Spin-Off Autumn Retreat (SOAR), Betsy created a skein of yarn for demonstrations that includes wool from twenty-two rare sheep breeds.

 

Betsy Alspach: Last winter, I became fascinated with learning about rare breeds of sheep and processing and spinning their fiber. My consciousness had been raised by Deb Robson and her wonderful DVD Handspinning Rare Wools. I watched it over and over and even took it with me on vacation because I couldn't bear to be without it for two-and-a-half weeks.

 

I live in Massachusetts, so when I learned that last year's Spin-Off Autumn Retreat (SOAR) would be held in New Hampshire and that Deb was teaching workshops on this very subject, I signed up as soon as registration opened for her Thursday workshop. Indeed, it was just the type of workshop that I wanted. She taught us about nine breeds and then gave us their fiber and time to experience it for ourselves.

 

I returned home even more enthralled with the qualities of rare breeds, their history, and the unique and important niche each fills. The danger of extinction adds to my interest as well as helping in a very small way to encourage breeders to continue their good work with these breeds.

 

  Betsy's skein of singles yarn that includes wool from twenty-two rare sheep breeds, plus two additional fibers that are rare to her.
 
  Betsy's skein and a sampling of the different wools that were included.
 

After SOAR, I soon decided to spin up a singles skein of rare breed wools and list each one in order. I alternated light and dark so that I could tell the beginning and end of each fiber and started my skein with a purple strand to mark the beginning. I also continued the practice that Deb taught us of making sample cards for each fiber with a spun strand and information about the staple length and micron count.

 

I used the nine samples Deb had given to us, bought two at SOAR, found fiber for a few more breeds already in my stash, obtained other samples from my friend and fellow rare-breed addict, Christine McClusky (who also attended the workshop), and bought a few more online.

 

What fun it was to add each one to the skein! And now, to know that when I admire the skein, it consists the fiber of twenty-two rare breeds of which a year ago I had very limited, and often no, knowledge. I plan to take the skein to workshops I teach and public demonstrations of spinning to enlighten others about the uses of the fiber from rare breeds and the importance of their preservation.

 

The skein includes the following fibers in order: Teeswater , Karakul guard hairs, Portland, Karakul undercoat, Clun Forest, Manx Loaghtan, Wensleydale, Romeldale, Lincoln Longwool, Jacob, Hog Island, Yak (not rare), Shetland, Gulf Coast, Churro, Shropshire, Swaledale (not rare), Soay, Oxford Down, Southdown, Cotswold, Dorset Horn dark, Dorset Horn light, and Leicester Longwool.

 

I added in yak I purchased at SOAR as well as Swaledale I bought online because both are rare to me; although, they are not on the list we were given at the workshop. As a result, the skein has a total of twenty-four samples.

 

Of course I plan to hunt for more.

 

—Betsy
Amy Clarke Moore

Amy Clarke Moore
is the editor of
Spin-Off magazine.

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Trending in 2012: Discovering the Importance of Rare Wools
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Rare wools are a treasure to work with. They contain qualities and aspects that cannot be found in common sheep breeds. Spinners should be honored every time they can work with those special fibers and cherish the novelty of the animals they came from. Many breeds of sheep are endangered, and the first step to helping conserve their unique fleeces is to gain a working knowledge of the animals and fiber. We are here to help you with that process.
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The Ultimate Fiber Resource!
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The Fleece and Fiber Sourcebook

Order Now! - Red - Large 

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The Fleece & Fiber Sourcebook

Deborah Robson & Carol Ekarius

 

This book is an outstanding resource for any fiber enthusiast! It's a reference book you will return to again and again as you grow as a fiber artist. This one-of-a-kind photographic encyclopedia features more than 200 animals and the fibers they produce.

It covers a tremendous variety of sheep breeds from around the world—from the longwool breeds of the United Kingdom to the Tasmanian Merino, the Navajo Churro, the northern European Faroese, and dozens and dozens more. It also includes goats, camelids, bison, horses, musk oxen, rabbits, and even dogs.  Each entry includes photographs of the featured animal; samples of its raw fleece, its cleaned fleece, and yarn spun from the fleece; and samples of the yarn knit and woven. You'll find everything you want to know about each animal and its fiber, including the fiber's color, density, strength, and staple length and recommendations for processing and using it. This is the essential reference no fiber-lover can be without.

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The Fleece and Fiber Sourcebook Spacer 10x10 pixels The Fleece and Fiber Sourcebook Spacer 15x15 pixels The Fleece and Fiber Sourcebook
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Even More Rare Wool Resources:
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Selections for Handspun Treasures from Rare Wools

Selections from

Handspun Treasures from Rare Wools

eBook

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Selections from Handspun Treasures from Rare Wools eBook
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Selections from Handspun Treasures from Rare Wools will:

  • Illuminate the vast variety of uncommon sheep breeds and their rare wools
  • Teach the significance these wools play for spinners today
  • Explore the rich history of handspinning
  • Help spinners of all levels understand this importance of diversity in wool
  • And more!
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Download Now! - Red - Small
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Handspinning Rare Wools Workshop

Handspinning Rare Wools

with Deborah Robson

Workshop Video

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"The information on the sheep breeds itself is extremely valuable to the handspinner and fiber artist. Add to that the wealth of knowledge about the characteristics of the individual fibers and their best uses and we have food for thought (and our spinning wheels) for decades, if not lifetimes!"—Debra (Dahlonega, Georgia)


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In Handspinning Rare Wools, Deborah Robson explores fiber from 38 rare and endangered breeds of sheep from Great Britain and North America.

 

You’ll learn that washing, carding, combing, spinning, and finishing these fibers is a never-ending experiment filled with surprises. You’ll hear stories about specific sheep breeders who have made a difference—a hundred or three hundred years ago.

 

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Also available for immediate download.

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