Fiber Market Monday

Welcome to Fiber Market Monday’s!

This is a place where folks can market their fiber goodies be them handmade, raw or processed fiber, or maybe even the fiber animal themselves!

This week I’m offering special pre-shearing price for the raw prime fleece from our alpaca, CoHo.  CoHo is small and very fiber mighty. He yields the most fiber of any of my animals and it is a beautiful dark grey in color with some brown spotting throughout.  Last year his prime fleece weighed 4.5lbs with close to a 6” staple length. 

   

Our shearing this year is on June 11th. If you pre-purchase CoHo’s fiber we will shear, skirt, air dry, package and have his fiber shipped out to you on June 13th.    If his yeild is about where it was last year this is a cost saving buy of just a hair over $1/oz!

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Raw alpaca not your thing?  Check out these other folks for natural fiber goodies.

Fiber Market Mondays

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Fiber Arts Friday: Hog Island Sheep

I have been slacking in my fiber duties as of late but this past weekend brought me back into the swing of things.

Saturday I got to enjoy a day of fiber fun with my neighbor Stephanie who raises the rare breed of Hog Island Sheep.  I’m told there are about 200 head left in the US but you can see them in their original home setting still at Mount Vernon.

Clover_Hill_Hog_Island_Sheep

Note: Hog Island lambs are usually born with color but 90% of them end up turning white as adults.

The most fun we had with the fiber was rug making.  Using raw fibers and only hand carders we wove the raw fleece straight onto the pegloom.  Stephanie really enjoyed the ease of using the loom and tells me her husband is in the works of making one for her.  I can’t wait to see her first full size rug on it.  I’m rather jealous since my raw alpaca doesn’t hold together even a 10th as nicely as her Hog Island does for weaving.

One thing I learned about Hog Island fleece is that it is springy! I think a small child could use a pile of their fleece as a trampoline. BOING!  She left me a small bag to play with and blend with other fibers. I think I’ll save it for the Tour de Fleece to work with.

I was a total idiot and didn’t take a single photo the entire time!  ARGH.  I blame it on the fact I was computer-less, the darn thing blew up on my Friday night and now I’m waiting for my new computer to come in. 

Be sure to check out Stephanie’s farm.  She is new to the fiber side of the business and has tons of this rare fleece. I’m sure she’ll be willing to sell some, if there are interested parties.

Stephanie Dempsey
Clover Hill Farm
2747 Bronson Hill Rd
Avon, NY 14414

Anywho, having a fiber weekend inspired me to finally finish my sock yarn shawl.  I am proud to say as of Thursday I finally bound off, wove in all my ends and even got some fringe on it.  All that is left is to block it.  Oh and of course mail it off to its new owner.

The photo is not a true blocking, I just tacked it up to my cubicle wall at work to have a look at it.  I was so proud of my last bind off stitch I could help but get a photo of it too LOL.

Sock Yarn Shawl

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Be sure to check out these other great fiber arts sights!

PS I just read through this post and realized my thoughts are rambling with no real path.  I guess that’s what 2 over night shifts this week will do to a person.  I’m SO tired!

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Fiber Wordless Wednesday

March: In like a lion out like a pregnant angry spitting alpaca dam?

Do you raise fiber Animals?
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FAF: The First US Alpaca Industry

Welcome back to FAF.  I hope you have your learning caps on because I’ve been digging into the research again.

This time I wasn’t sure what I was looking for but ended up getting all angry at today’s alpaca industry.  Long story short?  Why is it in the late 1800’s there was a perfectly sustainable alpaca fiber industry in the US without a single alpaca on American soil, yet today there are all these co-ops, registries, organizations and still we’re not getting paid for our fiber raised right here in America? ARGH.  Ok rant done. 

If you’ve read my post about Abraham Lincoln you’ll know that alpaca was his favorite textile but what happened to that thriving industry?  As it turns out around 1865 alpaca fiber was brought to the US and there was a very demanding market for 12 years.   2 alpaca mills were even established in Massachusetts, one in Holyoke and the other in Lawrence and specialized in linings, yarn, and dressed goods.

During its heyday, there was more demand for alpaca than there was availability and in 1875 the first alpacas were brought to the US and resided in the Alleghany Mountains in Maryland.  Unfortunately, as soon as the alpacas got here the demand for their fiber fell.  I guess the trends of the day changed and consumers were after luster deprived fabrics, yuck. 

The small herds of alpacas in Maryland were not doing very well either.  The lush grasses and atmospheric conditions were thought to be the culprit.  If I had $ to bet I’d say it was the M-worm that took its toll on the flock.  The high elevations of the Rockies was thought to be the only place where alpacas would ever survive in the country.

At the time of the writing of the article (1883) there wasn’t a single alpaca living from the 1875 import.  Thankfully, in 1883 another interest by consumers for alpaca was re-awakening and experiments blending alpaca with silk were showing to be favorable.  The author made assumptions that with renewed interest and new favorable locations in Wyoming and Nevada that alpacas would be prominent in America and would rival that of the merino sheep industry.

Well I guess we both know that the US now days is known neither for its thriving alpaca fiber industry nor is it the world leader for merino sheep.  *sigh*

Other than bookworming I’ve been happily working away doing fibery things.  Unfortunately I’m not using alpaca in my projects?! Why? Because it takes between 8-14 months for my fiber to get back from the mill! It’s been so long that I don’t even remember what day let alone month I sent my fiber to the mill.  (Seriously rant over I promise)

I have been working on a baby blanket for a friend of mine and my sock yarn shawl for another.  I also picked up some beautifully green yarn on sale at Joann’s.  Ok I know, its Joann’s but I had a 10% off my entire order coupon and the yarn was on clearance too.

sock yarn shawl

Green yarn

What have you been up to? Be sure to check out these other Fiber Folks.

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Encyclopaedia Britannica 1888


Fiber Arts Friday: 1st Textile Patent

If you happen to follow me on Twitter or Facebook you’ll know that I usually toss out a “today in history” blurb.  I was inspired by one of these for today’s FAF post.

Monday might have been Valentine’s Day but it is also another exciting day in US fiber history.  In 1974 the first US Textile Patent went to James Davenport of Philadelphia.  His first mechanical invention was used for carding and spinning wool followed closely on February 24th for another patent for weaving and beating sail duck. 

I found an advertisement for the invention and was floored by the use of boys for the labor.  Obviously this was way before labor laws.

The following was from h-net.org

Advertisement in Massachusetts Mercury, Aug. 24, 1798, in William R. Bagnall, Textile Industries of the United States, I (Cambridge, Mass., 1893), 225.

James Davenport received the first patent issued in the United States for his spinning machinery in Philadelphia (1794). He set up his machinery for spinning and weaving by water power at the Globe Mills, Philadelphia. The labor was chiefly performed by boys, one of whom was able to spin 292,000 feet of flax or hempen thread in a day of ten hours.

Spinning by Machinery

Into Thread and Twine

James Davenport proposes to sell or erect his Machine for spinning Hemp, Flax and Tow; he will complete it, and let it to work, and instruct any person inclined to purchase. These who have seen the machine at work will allow that the subjoined statement is strictly correct.

Thread. Two boys and one man can spin from 20 to 60 lb. per day; according to the fineness, regular and even.

Twine, Seine, or Sewing. This Machine will double twist, and finish from 50 to 60 lbs. per day, with 3 boys from 10 to 12 years old, which for regularity and excellence cannot be surpassed by the twisting by hand of the best workmen.

Any person willing to treat for the purchase of this invaluable invention, may hear the terms by applying to J. Davenport, at John Baker’s Hotel, Water-street.

Wanted, A Partner, who will find it advantageous.

While reading away on Mr. Davenport I couldn’t help but notice how his inventions on spinning and carding wool helped our struggling young nation.  Because England was taxing the begeezus out of the colonies the Americans revolted as we all know.  During this time England practically cut off textile imports and the Americans boycotted anything from England anyway making Davenports textile inventions quite the news in its day. 

That was until the greatest textile related patent on March,14th 1794. 
Any guesses as to what it was?

Let’s make it fun…  For anyone who comments below with the correct answer I’ll put your name in a drawing for a surprise handmade goody.  Drawing will be held on Saturday 2-19-2011

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Naturally the ultimate question is what have I been up to this FAF?  Well things have settled down finally and I’ve been hard at work on my shawl which has turned into a shawlette since I ran out of yarn (drat!).  I wasn’t happy with any of the patterns I found so I ended up winging it.  Thankfully I wrote everything down so I’ll eventually have the pattern posted sometime next week.

Here’s a photo of the shawlette finished yet un blocked. 

70% SW Merino 30% Tencel

New on my needles now a funky sock yarn shawl.  Being sock yarn I expect I’ll be at this one quite a while even with #6 needles.

Sock Yarn Shawl

Check out the folks below for more for fiber goodies.

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