#the100DayProject Weeks 6 and 7

Two singles ready to be plied into yarn, and the blog post title “Spindle Spinning for #the100dayproject Weeks 6 and 7”.

I’ve joined up with #the100DayProject this year with the goal of spinning every day. Writing down a daily log of my progress is an easy way for me to stay accountable, follow though, and plan what to spin next during this project.

If you’re just joining me, here’s what I did to prep and the first week of spinning. Weeks 2 - 3 are here, and weeks 4 - 5 are here.


Week 6

May 12 (Day 36): Dropped the spindle a lot today, but joining the single back to the fiber wasn’t hard at all. I gave my spinning buddy the leftover bits and pieces which she had fun pulling and smooshing and balling up in her hands.

May 13 (Day 37): So often these past few days, when I stop spinning is decided not by having to do something else, but by how sweaty my hands are. Trying to spin a definitely damp lump of fiber is not fun, not easy, and not doable. So I get a few minutes here, a few minutes there, and call it good.

May 14 and 15 (Days 38 and 39): Spinning in bits and pieces these past few days. Those minutes added up too! I’m much closer to the end of this piece of fiber than I was at the beginning of the week.

May 16 (Day 40): Got a lot of spinning time in today while my spinning buddy watched Frozen and the Muppets.

May 17 (Day 41): I’ve been able to practice drafting worsted when it’s cooler and my hands aren’t so sweaty. The difference between the worsted style drafting I can do with dry hands and the woolen style required when my hands are sweaty is massive. The yarn is way less fuzzy and doesn’t need the same amount of twist. Wish I could spin like this more often, but that requires more environmental management than I care to do throughout the day.

May 18 (Day 42): I finished spinning the second single! Feels so good to be finished with this part of the project, and I am so looking forward to starting the plying process tomorrow.

A turkish spindle wrapped in a red, blue, and purple single.

Week 7

May 19 (Day 43): I was so excited to take the single off the spindle that I started right after breakfast. The only problem was that I couldn’t remove the center shaft. Putting the whole thing in the freezer for 20 minutes helped loosen up the joint. Seems like all those times it fell during the spinning jammed the pieces together a little too tightly.

A turkish spindle sitting in the freezer to get the wood to contract enough to slip apart.
A hand holding a turtle of yarn, removed from the spindle to prep for plying.

I’ve been thinking about how I wanted to ply these singles for a few weeks. I considered spinning them directly from the turtle, but didn’t want to have to fix breaks on a seconds notice or untangle knots. Also on the list was winding them both to bobbin from my wheel, putting said bobbin on a kate, then plying on a spindle. I didn’t want to have to deal with moving even that much of a setup. Eventually I decided to fall back to old favorite, the plying ball.

The bottom of the two turtles removed from the spindle and ready to prep for plying.
A hand holding up a small ball, with singles wrapped around it, that will form the core of the plying ball.

I wound both singles together onto a ball which was accompanied by most of the major plot points in Frozen. The final ball ended up about the size of a softball or a grapefruit. The singles only broke in two spots at the my joins which I’m calling a win. I was also reminded of one of the reasons I love working with a plying ball. You get a lovely sneak peak of how the colors are going to mashup in the finished yarn. There are some really beautiful sections waiting in there.

The second single was much longer than the first so I cheated and held the end of the second single together with the end of the first and kept wrapping. No leftovers here. I don’t always fake a ply like this, but it’s a good trick to have.

A hand holding a fully wrapped plying ball that is ready to be used.

May 20 (Day 44): Plying continues! It is so fun seeing the yarn finally come together after 43 days of work. There has been one hiccup though. It is taking conscious effort to make the spindle spin clockwise for plying. Feels so weird making my hands move in a slightly different direction that I have to double check it’s twisting correctly. Thankfully, it’s very evident in the yarn when I’m twisting the plies in the wrong direction.

A top whorl spindle filling up with yarn and the plying ball sitting next to a large onion for scale.

May 21 (Day 45): The ball is about the size of a medium onion. Of course I had to take a photo for scale. My spinning buddy has been way more interested in the plying ball than the unspun fiber. She’ll pick up the ball and carry it around the house while I’m trying to ply which somehow has worked out without any hiccups or breaks.

May 22 (Day 46): Today’s adventures in plying saw my spinning buddy leading me around again , not by the nose, but by the plying ball. Whenever I put the ball and basket on a low table, she’s going to grab the ball and take me on a merry chase down the hall and back. No yarn was harmed in the process. It was pretty fun chasing after her while keeping the spindle spinning. :)

May 23 (Day 47): Day 5 of plying and my old tricks are coming back to me. The reason I like a top whorl spindle for plying is that I can use my feet to give the spindle a kick start when the yarn needs more twist or a restart. This has been especially handy because my spinning buddy thinks it’s funny to poke the spindle until it stops moving. I like hearing her giggle which means I’m not complaining in the least.

May 24 (Day 48): Not much spinning today, but I did get in a few minutes here and there while my spinning buddy was playing outside.

May 25 (Day 49):
I broke my own rule tonight - the one about not spinning after my spinning buddy goes to bed. This thing is that I really, really wanted to finish plying this yarn before the halfway mark, day 50. So that’s what I did. It took about an hour to get the last of the singles plied and on the spindle, and it was a trying process. The spindle was much heavier, absolutely packed, and there wasn’t much of a spot to grab to get things moving. I did it though. Here’s the spindle with my next 4 oz of fiber for scale.

A top whorl spindle full of plied yarn and sitting on a chain of un-spun fiber.

There’s still the finishing work to do - skeining, washing, drying, and measuring - but I can do that in between spinning up the next yarn. While this first yarn isn’t technically complete, it still feels good to have bulk of the work done so I can start fresh for the second half of #the100DayProject.

#the100DayProject Weeks 4 and 5

A turkish spindle holding purple singles and sitting on a section of hand dyed polworth fiber.

I’ve joined up with #the100DayProject this year with the goal of spinning every day. Writing down a daily log of my progress is an easy way for me to stay accountable, follow though, and plan what to spin next during this project.

If you’re just joining me, here’s what I did to prep and the first week of spinning. Weeks 2 and 3 are here.


Week 4

April 28 (Day 22): Usually the videos I take of the day’s spinning capture just a second of what I do. Today’s video caught just about everything. The only part it missed was the single breaking and the spindle hitting the floor. The first chance I had to pick up the spindle was after the day’s chores were done and my spinning buddy was in bed. My reserves were gone and I didn’t have the energy to try again when the single broke in the first 20 seconds of spinning.

I tried, that’s good enough for today.

April 29 (Day 23):
While I’m enjoying the fiber I’m working with, I don’t want to spend all of May spinning it. So, I’m aiming to spin more than I have the in the last few days. Shouldn’t be too hard considering I only spun for 5 - 10 minutes at a time. Today’s spinning time probably clocked in at around half an hour, and the spindle looked much different when I was done. Feels good.

April 30 (Day 24): Got a nice chunk of yarn on the spindle while my spinning buddy enjoyed the daily showing of Frozen and Frozen II.

May 1 (Day 25): Long day today running errands. Spinning was almost an afterthought, but I got in a few minutes before calling it a day.

Hand dyed spinning fiber, a turkish spindle wrapped in a yarn single, and the wound single sitting in a grey basket.

May 2 (Day 26): Spinning was an afternoon activity when I realized I hadn’t spun during the morning. I squeezed in a few minutes while my spinning buddy rearranged the living room.

May 3 (Day 27): I got to spin outside today while my spinning buddy dug holes and covered the patio with chalk. It was a nice change of pace. Had to cut my spinning time short though to add my own chalk scribbles. :)

May 4 (Day 28):
Surprisingly, I got a lot of spinning done today. My spinning buddy wanted to snuggle up and watch Frozen so that’s what she did. At the same time, I got to make yarn. A lot of yarn.

A turkish spindle covered in a white and blue single.

Week 5

May 5 (Day 29): I am so close to joining the last piece of roving! Probably could have done so today if my afternoon time hadn’t been eaten up my other things. Definitely tomorrow.

May 6 (Day 30): Okay, so I haven’t started on the last section of fiber yet, but I’m getting close. There’s just a few inches left. Definitely tomorrow, for real this time.

May 7 (Day 31): Yay! I finally made it to the last length of fiber for this single! Getting to this point has been a bit of slog at times, but I’m still making yarn a few yards at a time.

I wasn’t sure when I started how much yarn I would end up making at the end of the 100 days, but I did have the rough idea of a skein a month. Here I am, a month in to 3.3 month project, and I’m not even plying the first yarn yet. I’ve never been the fastest spindle spinner though. Ah well. My goal was never to spin all the yarn or clear out my fiber stash (that’s the work of years at the rate I’m going). The goal is to spin yarn and get back to doing something I love that got lost in the shuffle of motherhood. Even if this yarn turns out to be the only skein I finish, #the100DayProject will still be a success.

A turkish spindle sitting on hand dyed fiber and wrapped in purple, red, and brown yarn.

May 8 (Day 32): More spinning today during the daily showing of Frozen, and in random bits here and there.

May 9 and 10 (Days 33 and 34): Not so much spinning this weekend, but I still turned more fiber into yarn.

May 11 (Day 35):
The only real rule I’ve been sticking to for #the100DayProject is doing it every day. I don't set a 15 minute timer. I don't do daily updates on Instagram. I don't take photos every day.

What I have done is make this project work for me. I keep my spindle and fiber out where I can see them. When I have a free moment, I make yarn. Some days that means I spin just a minute or two and some days I get 45 minutes. Instead of daily photos and Instagram posts, I take a quick video and compile them with the 1 Second Everyday app. The video isn’t even a minute long and covers over a month of spinning, but it’s something that I can come back to easily. And I keep this log, more or less daily, with no pressure to care about how an algorithm might share it. That’s the most freeing part.

A turkish spindle sitting on hand dyed fiber and wrapped with a yarn single.