Showing posts with label Equipment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equipment. Show all posts

Friday, 15 April 2011

Equipment

On the table in is a niddy-noddy for winding wool into skeins, useful when dying wool that's spun and plied. The hand-carders (left of photo, just in front of the chair at the table-end) are for pulling small amounts of wool in the same direction.



Table with Equipment


                 
                                                            Mother of All


The lazy-kate (table centre) holds bobbins each containing single ply.  The spinner takes one end of wool from each bobbin and feeds it into the area of the wheel known as 'The-Mother-of-All'.  As the wheel spins it draws in the wool and plies the strands together.

When the wool has been plied the full bobbin is replaced back onto the lazy-kate and it is fed into the wool-winder ready to be made into a ball.   The bobbins are held neatly in the traveller wheel when it is folded up.

Traveller Wheel

Wool Winder


Knitting Bag & Needle Cases



Monday, 11 April 2011

Pins & Needles


The varied array of needles shown in the photo include some that are more than 80 years old.
The old English needle guages are still useful and the blue needle box has guage holes along the top.

Do you call them knitting pins or needles?  For the purpose of this blog I will refer to them as needles.
Most patterns give the required size needles in mm (millimetres) as well as the UK traditional size.  Don't forget to check you're knitting tension before you begin.

Choose your needles carefully.  It makes a difference to your enjoyment if they are right for the job, so after you've found the correct size and length for your task consider whether you prefer plastic or steel. 

Some very cheap needles are great but some are too bendy or too slippery and plastic needles can break in the middle of a row if they're really poor quality.  Round needles are useful for socks and gloves.

Knitting is so wonderfully portable!  Just shove it in a shoulder bag and off you go!  Truly dedicated knitters know it can be addictive and feel lost going off without their needles! 

If you've decided to make knitting a paying hobby or a business take it with you wherever you go.  It's also quite ok to knit while waiting at hospital and other serious times.  Knitting, like many crafts, is theraputic.  In moments of anxiety it calms the nerves and helps those fretful hours pass.