My first question, when I was learning to spin many decades
ago, was "why does this darn doorknob thingy keep dropping on the floor?" Well,
that was a long time ago, and it really was a wooden doorknob on a dowel, and I
was trying to spin grease fleece. Why indeed!
Over the years, the questions became more interesting and
less plaintive. And for several years in the mid-1990s, master spinner Rita
Buchanan fielded a range of them, answering with depth, wisdom, and humor in Spin-Off magazine. Her
standing column was "Spinner's Questions," and in each issue she tackled one
issue in depth. Now you can have all those answers with just a click or two of
your keyboard (and a credit card number).
- Some questions were mundane but necessary: How
do you change a drive band? How do you avoid pills? How do you keep your stash
from driving you out of house and home?
- Some were aimed at practical mastery: How do you
spin a good sock yarn that will last? How do you make joins that won't pull
apart? How do you block your yarn? How do you avoid color streaks when you're
spinning from a not-entirely-uniform fleece?
- Some were sort of mathematical: "Is a three-ply
yarn rounder than a two-ply yarn?" (The answer might surprise you.)
- Some were philosophical: "Is there a right way to spin?"
Spinning is fraught with questions. There's very little
black or white, right or wrong, yes or no. That's why we never get tired of it. There's
always more to try, more to learn, more to challenge our hand skills and our
brain. More to argue about!
The wisdom Rita packed into answering even the seemingly
simplest question has proved timeless. I'm glad she agreed to let us make this
information available again.
—Linda