Zebra Black and White - Sold by the ball and 43 similar items
Zebra Black and White - Sold by the ball
$89.74 CAD
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Full refund available within 30 days
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PayPal accepted
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Maestro accepted
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View full item details »
Shipping options
Return policy
Full refund available within 30 days
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
---|---|
Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
New |
Brand: |
Homemade |
Color: |
Multi-Color |
Material: |
Wool |
Weight: |
2 - Fine/Sport |
Style: |
Handspun |
Country/Region of Manufacture: |
United States |
Type: |
Self-Striping Yarn |
Fiber Content: |
100% Wool |
Unit of Sale: |
Unit |
Shape: |
Ball |
Handmade: |
Yes |
Product Line: |
Homespun |
Listing details
Seller policies: | |
---|---|
Shipping discount: |
Free shipping on orders over $100.00 |
Posted for sale: |
May 15 |
Item number: |
1747284551 |
Item description
Craft enthusiasts and knitters alike will appreciate the unique charm of this Zebra Black and White Yarn. Handspun with care, this artisanal wool yarn is a testament to quality and creativity, featuring a striking multi-colored pattern that adds a touch of wildness to any project. Each yard is made from 100% wool, ensuring warmth and durability for all your crafting needs. Ideal for a variety of projects, this fine/sport weight yarn is perfect for creating accessories like scarves and gloves, as well as decorative home comforts such as blankets and throws.
The striped colors are so unique I've never seen anything like it to even know what to call it, which should make it it a standout addition to your yarn collection. Whether you're crocheting, knitting, weaving, committing crewelwork or macrame, or any other form of yarncraft, this yarn is sure to intruige your creative soul.
This is the by the ball listing. Listed price is for a relatively standard ball, 115 yards total. If you want intensely precise quantites of it, check out my Zebra by the yard page.
White Masham and Welsh Black wool, plyed together, create a nice, striped black and white yarn I call "Zebra". Zebra is priced by material weight plus labor time. I'm not sure it'd be good to wear next to the skin, but it certinaly looks pretty as a scarf.
This is sold in units by the yard.. Talk to me before sale for more exact numbers. I strive to fill these orders with the precise amount you request.
I begin by pulling the roving from the bag - that's a fancy term for spinnable wool- and set up at my Ashford Traveler wheel. After a few hours, there's quite a bit of single spin up nicely. But the work doesn't stop there - I then have to wind it off onto another bobbin and get ready for the next step.
Plying.
Plying is the process of finishing the yarn so that it will be hard to unravel, and so that it will not twist anything kit or woven out of it into spiral shapes. To ply this I set up the three filled bobbins on the Lazy Kate next to my feet, and feed the ends into the wheel once more, just like when I sit to spin. But now the wheel is turning the opposite way, so the energy built up in the fibers will hook the three singles together. The step between spinning and plying, wind-off, is critical. Yarn plied in reverse - which is to say, from the end I stopped at - will misbehave more while plying, and as it's worked later. It may also have thick or thin spots. Wind-off is the process of transferring all that mass of yarn onto another bobbin, so that the end I began spinning it from will be the end on the outside, the one I feed into the wheel to begin the ply. In the process of winding off, over-energized spots relax and slack spots take up the extra, so the yarn is smoother all around.
Once it’s plied, I transfer it into a skein, tie up that skein, and soak it in boiling water for ten minutes to set the twist in place. I then hang it somewhere with a weight at the bottom and let it dry. A few days later, I wind it into a ball, measure the yards, and consider it ready for sale or use.
A whole day can be spent doing nothing but this and pausing to eat. With my yarn, you know you’ve got something professionally made, with care in every step.
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