She intended to 3-ply from the very start, which gave me pause, as I couldn't imagine how she would tension the three spindles. I've never had luck with lazy kates, so I dug around in the Spindler's folder and I found plans to make ...
I departed from the instructions in many ways - first of all, the Spindle Jim in the Spindler's files area is really furniture-quality craftsmanship and mine is... well... not. I'm OK with this. If you look at their directions and look at my Spindle Jim, you'll notice many variations; nearly all of them are cosmetic. Their's is extremely pretty and mine is... ummmm.... serviceable!
I only wish that I'd have given some thought towards making mine easy to take apart. This doozy isn't coming apart - ever. I don't know where I'm going to store it. Oh, wait, I know - I'll just leave it in the living room. Good idea.
More on Spindle Jim later, first, let's look at Grace's spinning - didn't she do a great job?
See my poor little itchy dog? He's always scratching.
Here is the Spindle Jim, up close and personal, and with the hold-the-hook-onto-the-spinner solution. Tying it on with rubber bands worked perfectly well, too, but was annoyingly fiddly. This solution is quick and easy. Large soft drink straws work nicely, as well as short bits of tubing from the hardware store. I don't know if you can tell from the photo or not, but there are two different kinds of clear tubing in use here as well. I like the straw the best as it really wedges down onto my spindle shaft and assures that the spindle isn't going to jump off of the spinner. The straw comes from a Sonic Strawberry Limeade - summer bliss as far as I'm concerned. Isn't it amazing - everywhere you turn, there are tools for spinning?
You can use it with only one or two spindles, too. When I use it with two, I use the side positions with the extra little seatbelts. It keeps the spindles from drifting towards each other. Then, when you get everything plied and onto one spindle, you put that spindle onto the Spindle Jim and then wind the yarn off onto a skeiner - next post - stay tuned.
How did I ever live without this little gizmo? It is extremely handy. Since my wood stash rivals my yarn stash, it didn't cost me anything - I was able to rummage through my wood piles to find everything I needed. I only had to shop for the swivels. I really like this kind of project.
Have you heard my rant about how MUCH I hate Niddy Noddies? Well, I do. I completely hate them. So, I replaced the center post of my PVC niddy noddy with a length of broomstick to make a nice skeiner. Have you heard me wax poetic about how much I love a skeiner? Well, I do.
Below, you'll see Grace's yarn on the left and my yarn on the right, on my Niddy-Noddy-turned-skeiner -
In a few days, I'll post how you can make a skeiner for yourself out of everyday hardware store items. Stay tuned! In the meantime, admire Grace's 3-ply.
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Since it's my blog and all, I thought I'd slip my skein in here -
I plied this in the method that Abby Franquemont describes - I spun two different spindles-full, and then I plied them together. When one ran out, I did the Andean wrap thing with the remainder of the second spindle and finished it off that way. It works great, and Abby's right, it makes so much more sense than Andean plying one, huge, spindle full.
Thanks, Abby! You're on my genius roster, ya know.