Lab Goddess Fibre Club August 2016

Last month's fibre club installment went out a bit later then normal, due to my summer travels, but it has hopefully reached everyone successfully by now.

Sweet Breakdown on Dorset Horn

August's colourway was inspired by biochemist Gerty Cori, who's long collaboration with her husband resulted in our understanding of carbohydrate metabolism, particularly the breakdown of glucose and glycogen and the resultant production of lactic acid. She was the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine, which she shared with her husband and Argentinian Bernardo Houssay for their combined work on the catalytic conversion of glycogen and the involvement of the anterior pituitary gland in sugar metabolism.

The colours that I used in this month's club come from the very concrete AND a more theoretical interpretation of Cori's work. The dark reds and browns are taken directly from the liver and muscle tissues that she used in her research. The brighter colours are inspired by energy and growth, both of which require energy derived from sugar metabolism. The fiber is dyed with long stretches of each group of colours as a nod to the link between the two sides of the equation.

I used Dorset Horn wool as the base for this month: this is a hardy and rare UK breed that is known for its ability to breed out of season, making it very attractive to shepherds looking for meat production. The wool is sturdy, with a strong crimp, but it can be a bit tricky as the crimp is irregular, and will vary from lock to lock. So some attention is needed when spinning your singles! I'm planning to spin some of this up for some sturdy lined mittens for the winter.

Sign ups for the fourth quarter of the 2016 Lab Goddess Fibre Club are now open, so do come join us! There's lots of fun colours to come...

Green Mountain Holiday

We've been at my in-laws in Himself's home state of Vermont for the last week, and it has been the epitome of New England summer. Instead of trying to describe it in words, I'm just going to share some photos of what it's been like.

We head north and east today to coastal Maine, and another set of adventures that involve good friends we haven't seen in a long time, family celebrations, lobster, sailing, swimming in the ocean, and proper sweet corn. I suspect another photo essay will be upcoming next week. 

Lab Goddess Fibre Club July 2016

This month's Lab Goddess Fibre Club offering is a more semi-solid colourway than usual. Meet Far End of the Spectrum:

This colourway, dyed on British Suffolk wool, was inspired by Anna Jane Harrison, an organic chemist who focused her work on the structure of organic chemicals and their interactions with ultraviolet (UV) light, the waves lengths of light that are beyond the detectable range for human eyes. A professor of chemistry at Mount Holyoke College for many years, she was elected the first woman president of the American Chemical Society in 1978.

In addition to her research, Dr. Harrison was renowned as an educator; as a professor at an all women's small liberal arts college, she was a role model and inspiration for following generations of female scientists.

The colourway, though a variety of a semi-solid, actually took multiple dye baths to create. I wanted to capture the violet part of UV light but also include the fact that UV light is largely invisible or hidden from normal human sight. Purples and blues were first applied to the fibre and set, before adding black to the dyebath to hide the brilliance of the initial colours.

The Suffolk base is a serious wool: crunchy and sturdy, perfect for hardwearing items. Fairly rough in top form, the fibre softens with spinning to create a strong, durable yarn that I'm planning to use for some textured socks.

Come over to the Porpoise Fur Ravelry group to see how this fibre spins up, and share your own spinning photos!

Holiday time!

The last few days have been an absolute whirlwind. There's been the end of school:

Dev's first day and last days of primary school.

There's been dyeing and packing of this month's Spinning Box contribution,

Under the Big Top on Suffolk

And this month's Lab Goddess Fibre Club.

And there's been finishing up a whopping load of Tour de Fleece spinning.

Now we're off to the States for some good holiday with family. I hope everyone is having a lovely summer, and see you soon!

The Tour de Fleece is here - hooray!

Last Saturday was the launch of the Tour de Fleece, as well as a little bike race in France. I went down to the wire on setting goals for myself for this year's event, but finally I put some down in writing last Thursday:

1) Spin up the May and June fibre club colourways.
2) Spin up at least 4 bundles of my Hello Yarn fibre stash into yarns for sale.
3) Spin up at least 2 bundles of HYFC into yarn for me.

Since then, I've added Goal #4: Spin up the 2016 Tour de Fleece colourways on the appropriate days. Since today is Stage 4, that means I've been spinning up Rosé d'Anjou. This is going to be a fractal 2-ply, and here's the first ~1.5 oz done.

As for the other goals? Well, I've finished 3 oz of Hello Yarn merino into singles that will need to be fulled and finished. I also finished off my Lab Goddess Fibre Club Cortus on Wensleydale, which I started spindling a looooong time ago, so I've crossed off 1 bundle from Goal #2 and one bundle from unlisted goals. Or something like that...

Here's the first three days in order:

Day 1: Damp Earth on Merino from the Hello Yarn Fiber Club
Day 2: Cortus Wensleydale from the Lab Goddess Fibre Club
Day 3: Started Critter Falkland from HYFC

Please feel free to come join Team Porpoise Fur on Ravelry - any and all spinning projects are welcome and will be heartily cheered on, but to be eligible for prizes, you've got to spin some Porpoise Fur.