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  2. Spinner's weasel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinner's_weasel

    Spinner's weasel (left) and spinning wheel (right) Spinner's weasel or clock reel is a mechanical yarn-measuring device consisting of a spoked wheel with gears attached to a pointer on a marked face (which resembles a clock) and an internal mechanism that makes a "pop" sound after the desired length of yarn is measured (usually a skein). The ...

  3. Hand spinning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_spinning

    Spinning in the grease covers the spinner's hands in lanolin and, thus, softens the spinner's hands. Spinning in the grease works best if the fleece is newly sheared. After several months, the lanolin becomes sticky, which makes the wool harder to spin using the short-draw technique, and almost impossible to spin using the long-draw technique.

  4. Spinning wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinning_wheel

    The spinning wheel spread from the Middle-East to Europe by the 13th century, with the earliest European illustration dated to around 1280. In France, the spindle and distaff were not displaced until the mid 18th century. [15] [16] The spinning wheel replaced the earlier method of hand spinning with a spindle. The first stage in mechanizing the ...

  5. Spinning (textiles) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinning_(textiles)

    Spinning is a twisting technique to form yarn from fibers.The fiber intended is drawn out, twisted, and wound onto a bobbin.A few popular fibers that are spun into yarn other than cotton, which is the most popular, are viscose (the most common form of rayon), animal fibers such as wool, and synthetic polyester. [1]

  6. Abby Franquemont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abby_Franquemont

    Chinchero spinner. Franquemont was born into a textile environment. [3] [6] She remembers "falling asleep under her father's loom."[6] Among friends in Chinchero, Franquemont and her sister spent their early childhoods within the hand spinning and hand weaving culture of the local Quechua people, before those ancient skills began to be lost to the influence of Western society, as described in ...

  7. American Textile History Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Textile_History...

    In 1958, Caroline Stevens Rogers, a member of a textile industry family and a hand weaver and dyer, came into possession of her father’s collection of over 50 spinning wheels in various stages of collapse and a truck load of heavy beams (the disassembled parts of antique hand looms) as well as dozens of reels, winders, skarnes, riddles, and niddy-noddies. [3]

  8. FarmVille 2 Spinning Wheel: Everything you need to know - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-02-13-farmville-2-spinning...

    This Spinning Wheel encourages you to tend your Sheep and Rabbits in order to earn Spinning Wool, which can then be turned into Spun Yarn. This feature might sound a bit complicated at first, but ...

  9. Spinning frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinning_frame

    In 1760 England, yarn production from wool, flax and cotton was still a cottage industry in which fibres were carded and spun by hand using a spinning wheel.As the textile industry expanded its markets and adopted faster machines, yarn supplies became scarce especially due to innovations such as the doubling of the loom speed after the invention of the flying shuttle.