Several years ago when I lived in Montana, a lady I met gave me a small bag of black wool from her sheep. I finally decided to make something with it this year. I thought it would be a nice color for a guy to wear and I've never knit anything for my husband, so I decided on a pair of socks.
First I carded the wool into rovings in preparation for spinning.
Then one afternoon I grabbed my pile of rovings, a cup of coffee, and sat down to my spinning wheel.
This is the finished yarn. The color is natural black/brown/gray from the sheep.
I didn't have a lot of fiber to work with, so I spun a fairly fine yarn so there would be enough yardage.
Then I measured Mike's foot, picked out some needles, and knit a small sample to determine how many stitches per inch my yarn/needle combo made. Then I figured out how many stitches I needed to put on my needles to make a sock that would fit, and started knitting.
I knit this sock from the toe up.
Then turned the heel, knit some more and added a cuff.
The socks always look more finished after you wash and shape them.
Here they are on my feet- a little big for me, but you get the idea.
The socks fit Mike and the project kept me entertained for quite a while, so that is good! :)
The socks fit Mike and the project kept me entertained for quite a while, so that is good! :)
If you're interested in knitting socks from handspun yarn, I recommend The Twisted Sisters Sock Workbook by Lynne Vogel.
WOW!! That is really neat... we are raising a lamb and thought it would be really neat to spin my own wool sometime!
ReplyDelete