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Monday, December 29, 2014

Spinning in the Grease - Part Three (The Final Yarn)

Old Business: I have edited my post on the 3-D Printed spindles my husband made for me.  I will do a follow up post on how they spin later.


the four final skeins 

Spinning in the Grease - Part Three (The Final Yarn)

The unwashed plyed yarn.

New Business: Previous Two Posts on Spinning in the Grease are HERE and HERE

I have finally managed to get to the plying of the Cormo yarn spun in the grease.  I have two skeins of about 250 yards of fingering weight yarn.  I have some more of the wool to spin but not enough for another skein of the same size (including a batt made from the cast offs and tangled bits).  So I am going to spin a single a ply it with a far more wild single I have previously spun.  This should give me a third and fourth skein in a coordinating yarn for knitting in the future.  I personally love this kind of yarn.

Top: single ply Cormo yarn (spun in the grease) plyed with the lower yarn
Bottom: single ply yarn of silk, wool, sparkle, and sari silk (previously mentioned as a yarn titled "Mood Swing")

Washing of the finished yarn was easy. The yarn was put into a 2 yard skein on my niddy knoddy and secured.  I heated up water on the stove in the pot I have dedicated to this task (for all yarn washing).  I added some Unicorn Wash Power Scour and threw the yarn in when it was smoking hot but not even simmering.  The yarn required two washing to get it clean and I did not remove all of the grease in the process.  I may wash it one more time in a more mild soap.  It was then hung to dry without any weight on the skeins (I only use a weight on drying skeins for single ply yarns).

I will note (and I think this is a big thing when spinning in the grease) that I pulled the yarns out of the washing pot while the water was still hot.  I did this out of impatience.  Normally I would have left them to cool with the water and dealt with them in the morning but as it turns out taking them out while the water was hot was important.  I left the water in the pot over night minus the yarn.  In the morning I noticed a cold coating of grease and dirt floating on the top of the water.  If the yarn had been still in the water I would have had to skim the grease off the surface of the water before removing the yarn or risk it redepositing on the yarn.

2 ply Cormo yarn spun in the grease, being washed.  You can see all the grease and goo that came out of the yarn in the water.
I will also note that when washing the mixed fiber yarns, that there was sari silk in the blend.  This is notorious for having extra dye in the fibers that will come out in the washing and then dye the rest of the skein.  I combat this two ways for any yarn that has sari silk in it.  First I throw in a hand full of dye catchers into the pot.  These look like dryer sheets and absorb the excess dye released into the water.  You can find them in the laundry isle of the decent grocery store.  And the second thing is not to let the yarn stay in the pot of hot water for long.  Take it out and rinse it right away with as hot a water as you can stand.  This should get most of the dye out but I would expect some further bleeding of dye over the years.  Don't block anything with sari silk in it on your good bed spread.  

Blended Yarn of 50% Cormo wool spun in the grease and 50% wool, alpaca, silk, sari silk, sparkle, and baby camel.  Shown before washing.

In the end the skeins looked and felt no different than if I had washed the wool first and processed it in a more traditional manner.

Skein one: 100% Cormo wool 250 yards of light fingering weight wool
Skein two: 100% Cormo wool 280 yards of light fingering weight wool
Skein three: 50% Cormo wool and 50% wool, alpaca, silk, sari silk, sparkle, and baby camel blend; 230 yards of light fingering weight wool
Skein four: 50% Cormo wool and 50% wool, alpaca, silk, sari silk, sparkle, and baby camel blend; 120 yards of light fingering weight wool

Grand total yardage: 880



Friday, December 26, 2014

Christmas Spindles



It was a small box with a very cool gift in it.  My husband is a mechanical engineer who has a 3-D printer at work.  He used it and a copy of Solidworks, to print me three Turkish style spindles.  The largest is 1.0 oz and 8" long.  The medium spindle is 0.6 oz and 5" long.  The tiny Turkish spindle is 0.4 oz and 3" long.  He has told me that they are brittle and can break if dropped.  If they do break, he says he can just print me a new one or a new part.  He can also remove the wholes in the arms to make them heavier.  I have not tried them but I trust him that they are balanced well.  I think they are all excellent prototypes.  I'd like a little more weight on them but I favor a heavier spindle.  I'd like the shaft of the tiny one to be longer so I can fit more yarn on it.  There is a point were they just get to tiny to use well and I think this might be there.  The two larger ones are fantastic and I would not change a thing.

EDIT (12-27-14): I have found out from my clever husband that all of the shafts fit all of the arms; they are completely interchangeable.  In addition we are going to add a small indent in the top of the shafts for the thread to hold onto.  The surface has texture, so I'm not that worried about slipping threads like I have experienced on highly polished wood surfaces, but we both think I would look nice.  The texture also makes me think this would not be a good spindle for silk or similar fibers.  We might have trouble getting the arms out after we were done.  I will post later of course, once I have had a chance to use them.

I must say, I love my husband because this is an amazing, thoughtful, and wonderful gift.

EDIT (1-28-15): Follow up blog here



Thursday, December 11, 2014

A Tale of Three Crafts Shows

Over the course of the last week I've participated in three very different craft shows to sell my hand spun yarns, hand dyed yarns, hand woven goods, some felted jewelry, and hand spinning yarn kits.  This is the postmortem for the  events.

My table from one of the events

My table from one of the events

Show One (listed in no particular chronological order)

One show was badly organized, had a high table price ($90), suffered from bad weather, but most importantly the organizers had not advertised it at all.  No website, no newspapers, nothing.  It was held in a church and I don't think the congregation knew about the fair either.  It was organized by a third party that runs shows as a business.  There were some signs on the road leading to the location but only in the day of the show. This site did not charge an entrance fee for shoppers (some events/sites do). I think we had only 30 people though the doors and only 9 vendors total.    The organizer was not on site for much of the event.

Now with the craft fairs that are not jurried, and cost less than the $200-$300 table fee, you can expect some representation from Mary Kay and similar businesses.  In this case, of the 9 vendors who attended, 3 of us were actual crafters and the rest were of the Mary Kay or Solar Power Programs sort.  So of the 30 people or so, who did come to the fair, not many would have had incentive to spread information by word of mouth on the day of the fair.  The show went from 10 am to 4 pm.  The first vendor left at 2 pm.  The rest of us left at 3 pm.  I sold one item for $15 (it was jewelry).  

On the positive side, I can say communication with the organizer was prompt and polite.  Information was complete in terms of when to show up, how to set up, and similar.  I can also say the size of the space I received for my fee was good ($90 for a 8' x 6' or $1.88 per square foot).  But, he did tell us that he advertised the fairs he ran and clearly this was not true for this event.  From what I could tell from other vendors who had worked with him before, this is a problem for all his shows.  So why were they still at this show, if they had bad results with other shows?  They had signed up for more than one show in advance for a discount on table fees.  Their money was already invested, thus they were stuck.  I had only signed up for one to see how it would go.

On a personal note, in spite of the awful nature of this show, two good things came out of it.  One was a lengthy conversation with a woodworker on how to make drop spindles and the promise that if they did try to make some for sale that they would let me beta test them.  (I will add that this couple said they they would never have found the craft show if someone else at the library book sale (1/4 a mile away) had not told them about it.  There were no no signs on the lawn of the library to direct them to the craft show.  Nor any flyers at the book sale.)  The second was that a woman who runs a fine art show in the spring (and has run it for 30 years) took my card to send me an application to vend because she liked my fine art work.

The total for this show was $90 in table fees and $15 in sales.

My fine arts works.  (Website Link)
The Second Craft Show (again in no particular chronological order)

This show is a bit of an odd ball because it is held mid week, aiming for the working lunch crowd, rather than someone on the weekend looking for something interesting to do.  It was held in a very central location, with a very high population of working adults.  So the site knows its audience, which is good.  Given the target audience this show was held over three days for a single table fee. 

The weather was also against this show, with rain mixed with snow for the three days of the event.  The site was packed with vendors which is good for pulling people in.  The set up space size was the smallest I had to work with but that too was ok, not great but ok. (6'x 3' or $5.56 per square foot which is the most expensive of the shows unless you divide that by 3 days so it is really $1.85 per square foot per day). The table fee was $75 with $25 for insurance (this was waived with proof of your own insurance).  This show also allowed me to set up the night before which was very useful but in doing so I did an inventory each evening and each morning.  The site's security was fine.

This site advertised well.  The fair was organized by the venue itself, so there was a website, radio, and print advertising .  They encouraged  me to spread the word as well, link to their website etc.  They also had signs and flyers.  The site was very well organized and the staff was helpful throughout the 3 day event.

I used a knitting stitch counter to track table visits for this event (not people though the door).  I should have thought of it sooner.
  • Day one:  16 people stopped at my booth    1 sale (Nor'Easter Hit on this day)
  • Day two:  23 people stopped at my booth    5 sales (Weather was rainy but manageable)
  • Day three: 36 people stopped at my booth    5 sales (Weather was light flurries)
To spite the limited hours of operation and the awful weather, I did make money on this show.  A few people came to the booth on all three days to "visit" the yarn.  I handed out a lot of business cards and it seemed like the majority of the items were gifts.  Several people told me they were very happy to find things for the hard to shop for crafters in their families.  In other cases, I overheard people mentioning that the yarn was overpriced.  Its hard to compete with machines.  I wish they had asked me about the prices so they could at least understand the cost of the yarn but I understand why they did not too.

The other vendors at this show ranged from cheaper crafts to high end crafts to fine art.  I did not notice anyone selling Amway.  I found a few Christmas gifts too.

The total for this show was $115 in expenses and $250 in sales.  So not a lot of profit but still good to get my name out, learn about other shows from other vendors and so on.  I will repeat this show if possible.  

The Third Craft Show (again in no particular chronological order)

This show was also organized by the venue that hosted it.  They knew their target audience, the show had good advertising, and it had a high turn out for people who attended.  To start at the top, the site was a well known location that had high traffic on a normal day, never-mind during one of its many events (not all craft shows).  This site did not charge an entrance fee for shoppers.  The booth sizes ranged in size and price but the both were reasonable ($70 for a 10' x 4' or $1.74 per square foot).  The event was full with only a few cancellations by vendors.  Vendors ranged from the Mary Kay type to the majority being crafters with some fine arts present as well.  The show was big enough that it spilled out of the main hall and into every hallway they had.  

I suspect that the turn out for the site was 500-1000 people.  I'm not really sure since I was not close to the front doors.  The weather for this day was cold but fine.

There was on site food available for shoppers and vendors.  This is always a plus for vendors who normally pack a lunch, and guests who might stop shopping because they got hungry.

Advertising was very well done.  Signs went up around the neighborhoods near the site a month in advance.  There were a lot of signs on the day of as well.  The congregation also knew about the sale.  Vendors who signed up in advance were sent cards to hand out or mail to customers.  These mailers were free of charge.  There was also more traditional print advertising and a website. Communication was good, organization on the day of was excellent with a bonus of hand trucks available to help load in and out.

I found that if I was knitting at my booth, fewer people stopped to look, than if I was using a drop spindle.  This is not that surprising since most people don't know how their clothes are made and I've seen it happen time and time again at shows.

I had 8 sales for a total of $271 (not including deductions for table fees).  This is not a great sale day, I've done better but it is still better than a weekend of $8.75 an hour ($8.75 * 8 hours).  It was also far better than my recent Etsy sales.  I handed out almost all of my business cards, and had a number of great conversations with knitters, crocheters, and weavers.  I might have gained some students interested in private weaving lessons. I told many people of the wonders of Raverly. The typical sale was about $40 or one skein of yarn.  In some cases the items were gifts for knitters and crocheters and in some cases customers were feeding their own stash of yarn.  I think this split was about 50/50.

EDIT TO ADD: In addition one man, who had seen the booth, and taken a card at this show, called me back to order Christmas presents to the tune of $350.  Which now makes all difference.

I will repeat this show next year.
A similar set up at another show


A Few More Things and To Sum Up

Locations that host their own craft or fine art shows have a vested interest in its success and do better advertising.  Look into this before you sign up.  Do your own part to promote yourself and the show as a whole.

Table location on a site can matter but not half as much as the number of people who walk in the door.  If a show cannot give you attendance numbers for the last few years don't book.  Don't book if its low.

My Etsy card reader worked just as advertised.  Taking credit cards made the difference in more than one sale.

Every sale relied on getting into a conversation with customers about what they liked  to make, what kinds of yarns they worked with, what allergies they had, and who they made things for.  Every sale.

Spinning at the table gets far better results than knitting (even if I made good progress on Christmas gifts).  If you have a craft that can be done at the table then do it.  There was a one man with glass & a torch and he was making small figurines.  He always had an audience.

There is nothing you can do about the weather in December in New England.  Then again, no one can do anything about that either.

I need a large sign for the name of my business with a logo.  I also need a sign that says "Please touch the yarn!" since I constantly had to tell customers to do so.

For all the business cards I handed out I have not seen an uptick in site views for my Etsy store. However it has only been a few days since I completed these craft shows.  And in the end it just took one to make a huge sale.  Never underestimate the power of a business card and personal connection.
None of these were fiber festivals and so they were not quite the best target audience for my items. 

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Lable All The Things! (The Craft Show Post)


50% Silk and 50% Baby Camel Hand Spun Yarn
The craft show season is upon us!  It is at once my favorite and least favorite time of the crafting year.  Farmers markets are lovely and slow moving in the summer (I'm not a farmer so I can safely say this) but the holiday rush is fast and done in less than a month.  Over the next 3 weeks I have at least 3 shows to attend and sell at, possibly 2 more.  I've posted the schedule below in case you are interested.  

I love spending the time with customers, educating them on my products, and listening to their stories.  The set up beforehand is exhausting in the tiny details.

I sell hand spun yarns, hand dyed yarns (commercially spun), occasionally hand woven goods like scarves and shawls, fibers for hand spinning, and tools for knitting, crochet, & spinning.  These are not your typical craft show items but I do it for two reasons.  The first is that these items always sell better in person than on Etsy (I do have an Etsy shop but its slow).  Yarn really needs to be handled.  The second reason I sell at craft fairs is the kind of customer I am able to reach.  People who go to craft fairs are also, in many cases, those who like to do their own crafting.  They appreciate, and are willing to pay for, handmade items because they understand the amount of time it takes to make things.  Sometimes I reach the spouse of the knitter or crocheter, and these are my favorite customers.   Having a crafter for a spouse is hard because what we really want is supplies to further our hobbies.  And sometimes the spouse is either aware enough or brave enough to give him or her yarn!
  • Trumbull Holiday Craft Festival- Saturday Dec 6th at The Grace Episcopal Church Hall, 5958 Main St. Trumbull, CT (10am - 3pm)
  • JCC Arts and Crafts Fair - Sunday Dec 7th at the JCC of Grater New Haven 360 Amity Road, Woodbridge, CT (10am - 4pm)
  • 2014 Holiday Shopping Fair - December 9th through Dec 11th (Tuesday to Thursday) at Connecticut's Old State House 800 Main Street Hartford, CT (11am to 3pm each day)
Hand Spun Lace Weight Yarn (Wool and Silk)
  • AND PERHAPS
  • Shelton Holiday Craft Festival- Sat Dec 13th, at Hyatt House Hotel, 830 Bridgeport Ave., Shelton, CT (10am to 3pm)
  • Holiday Carousel of Crafts Showcase, Sunday Dec 14th, Trumbull Marriott, 180 Hawley La., Trumbull, CT (11am to 5pm)


EDIT (1/15/2015): Follow up post here (A Tale of Three Craft Shows)