And so continues the journey of my Ashford Traditional spinning wheel….and I never once took a photo of it 🙁 I got it in the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) back in the 90s and had it in my home in southern Chile. I wished I’d asked how it had made its way to the Falklands in the first place…directly from the manufacturer in New Zealand or perhaps via the UK or perhaps by some other more exotic and convoluted route?
Whie living in Chile and before I got the wheel, I had brought some alpaca back from my first trip to Peru to spin with a drop spindle that I’d also bought there. My inexperience meant that I made a mess of it and so, discouraged, I put spinning aside for a while!
Later, I turned to sheep. There were sheep galore down there in Patagonia and I was given a fleece. So, I got experience washing and carding it and my first project was knitting! I can hardy believe it as I can barely knit. But I designed a pattern, based on the shape of a cotton vest that I owned, and fumbled my way through knitting the front of a vest using wool that I had spun on the spindle.
By this time, I’d acquired the Traddy and I wove the back panel using my first wheel-spun yarn which I dyed brown in a balanced plain weave on my Navajo-style vertical loom…without a reed. I probably didn’t even know that reeds existed back then (you can just get a glimpse of the brown back on the far right in the photo above). Spinning yarn that worked well for this knitting and weaving was a complete fluke. I really had very little idea about what I was doing. The vest is edged with a triple cross-knit-looping stitch that I’d learned both from my sling-braiding teacher in Peru and one of my weaving teachers in Bolivia. And I also used a band I’d woven as an edging.

And that was all the action the poor Traddy got to see in my hands. I brought it up to Bolivia with me and it gathered dust in a corner for a while before I eventually dismantled it (my cat was finding it way too interesting) and it sat in the closet while I continued to spin on drop spindles. Now it’s gone to the Brazilian owners of my local yarn store. Maybe it will make a trip to Brazil one day.
Bye-bye Traddy. Enjoy your world travels. The rest of this post on spinning includes some sections that I’ve posted before and so you may find some parts familiar.
I am a “cheap spindler” in much the same way as I am a cheap drunk…it doesn’t take much to make me happy! Don’t waste the good wine on me. I do not have a refined palate. So, it is little wonder that I am content to use my humble Cusco drop spindle when I get the urge to spin. I just don’t have a refined palate for spinning tools.
The Cusco spindle was the second one I ever got, the first being from San Pedro de Atacama in northern Chile. The Cusco one that I got in 1996, being more robust, became my constant travel companion. It was practical. Although I have collected many more spindles on my weaving safaris since then, this Cusco one is the one I always use while the others hang on the wall behind the sofa as souvenirs of places I have been and people I have met.

The very first spinning that I did for weaving on my backstrap loom was with some extremely dry, brittle, and filthy llama fiber that I had bought from a farmer while wandering about the back roads of Uyuni in the Bolivian highlands. I cleaned and prepared it. The dust and dirt would have me wheezing and my skin would crawl and eyes run every time I opened the bags to get more. It made for good spinning training. I gave the fiber a tremendous amount of twist because at that time I believed that this was the only way hand-spun yarn could possibly stand up to the abrasion of warp-faced weaving. I have since learned that this is not so. That kind of yarn produces durable, hard wearing cloth and in a tight warp-faced weave can make a garment highly water-resistant. Of course, that isn’t always the kind of cloth I want.





After that experience with the alpaca, I never added extra twist to industrially-spun yarn again. Of course I had to choose yarn that had certain characteristics. I used the soft Knit Picks Palette straight out of the cake for this next piece. It was actually just a stash-busting exercise to use up odds and ends and I wasn’t convinced that it would work for warp-faced weaving in string heddles. It did with a little extra care. I wove this piece with four-selvedges and only had to be very careful when needle-weaving the end so as not to split the loose ply with the needle.
I really enjoy reading the online group forums about spinners and their spindles. The participants’ love and enthusiasm for their tools is wonderful….I totally get it but I just don’t share it. Some of the spindles they show are beautiful pieces of craftsmanship and I love seeing them. But when it comes down to it, I just want to get the job done. If you like your tools to be uniquely hand-carved pieces of art, take a look at Allen Berry’s work on Instagram (allenrberry). All his fiber tools are amazing.
It seems that when it comes to spinning I am totally product oriented which is kind of strange as it is quite the opposite when I weave. I just want to get this stuff done so I can go weave with it. In weaving I am all about enjoying the process. I probably would not have been willing to devote any great amount of time to spinning if not for the pandemic. The combination of needing to keep my hands busy during Zoom sessions as well as a dwindling stash had me happily spinning up all the wool I could find in my closet.

It was strange that after all these years this would be my first time weaving on my backstrap loom with my own drop-spindle-spun sheep wool. Was I nervous about it? Yes!

And then I took on a new adventure…spinning cotton. As with my favored Cusco spindle for wool, I have taken the takli that Elizabeth gave me in Australia as my one and only tool for cotton. It is all I feel the need for right now. It makes for quiet, comfortable, and fuss-free Zoom spinning.

My collection of spindles that I have gathered in my travels includes a few that are used for cotton. Here are two from Guatemala and one that I bought from my Guaraní teacher here in Santa Cruz. The whorl on that one is a piece cut from the sole of a sandal.
I couldn’t believe my luck when one of the local museums here offered a workshop given by two Guaraní ladies on spinning cotton. We didn’t get to keep the spindles but the whorls on the ones we used were also made from pieces of rubber sole.

I came up with some unconventional ways of my own for handling the spinning and processing, like using this wooden mortar as the support for the takli. I like that I can grip its neck between my knees while I’m seated to spin. It works really well and the sound of the metal spindle tip against the wood is quieter than when I used to use a ceramic dish.
And I found these mesh pencil cups useful as a way to hold my singles under tension when they were being boiled to set the twist.
It was fun seeing how the colored cottons deepened in tone when they were boiled.

And of course, there is the horizontally-held spindle for cotton spinning that is used by my teachers in coastal Ecuador.

Here are some tiny whorls from coastal Ecuador that the family had found while ploughing their fields. There were close to forty of them sitting in a bowl on a shelf, just like that.
My very first experience with spinning cotton had been in coastal Ecuador where I got to work almost from scratch, de-seeding, teasing apart, and fluffing up the cotton. It was difficult spinning it on the horizontally-held spindles compared to what I do now with the takli. Unfortunately, I didn’t spend much time on it while there, being much more interested in the weaving part of the process. My teachers already had plenty of spun singles that they doubled for warp so that I could learn how they weave their double-pocket saddle bags and hammocks. We would pass time in the evenings on cotton preparation.

I put in a little practice when I got back home but the loom soon called me away…
I may have never gone back to cotton if not for the pandemic. The loom was always pulling me one way yet my stash of gifted sliver in the closet was growing. Thank you to all those, especially Betty, who were so kind with their gifts when I was visiting in the States.
I have woven with my singles thread. It was an even freakier experience than the first time weaving with my handspun llama yarn all those years ago.I was surprised to see how well it tolerated the string heddles and the close sett on my backstrap loom.
I’ve used it in plain weave for ikat pieces as well as for pieces decorated with pick-up patterns that I’ve used in small purse and wallet projects.
Right now I’m spinning some more brown sliver that I just uncovered in the closet. I’ve yet to use the brown in a project.

No doubt when I return to Australia I’ll have lots of access to sheep fleeces and will wonder about my Traddy and how it’s being used on this side of the world. I won’t be buying another wheel though, and will slowly work my way through, as is my habit, with my drop spindle. I won’t be displaying my other spindles on the wall either and that might lead me to picking up one of the others for a spin and giving the Cusco one a rest.
See you all next time…














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Laverne, wonderful post as usual. So many years of dedication to the craft, so well written.
I’m not much of a shopper, but I am going on an ATA tour to the Sacred Valley in October and you’ve convinced me that Cusco spindle is something I’ll have to find.
Saludos
Kate
By: fiberassociations on August 16, 2024
at 3:02 am
Thank you, Kate. That tour will be wonderful. Just go to the everyday feria in Cusco city and you’ll find people selling spindles. That’s where I got mine and I took DY Begay there to get one when we were there in 2010.
By: lavernewaddington on August 16, 2024
at 3:12 am
🙏🏽💚
By: fiberassociations on August 16, 2024
at 3:44 am
I love the way you have documented all your adventures with fiber I’ve spent the last couple of weeks trying to ply up some odd bobbins of singles that I created when I first started spinning. I’ve tried a drop spindle but only mastered the drop part. These early singles were super fine and not very tightly spun. So at the suggestion of my friend Ruth Greenspan – who’s a master spinner – I tried making cabled yarn – ( https://spinoffmagazine.com/kate-larsons-tips-spin-cabled-yarn/) It was an adventure but a perfect solution for my not very perfect yarn. But I should have taken photos along the way like you do. That would have made the learning process so much better – and increased the possibility that I could repeat it. Thanks again for sharing your adventures. un fuerte abrazo – Virginia
By: Virginia on August 16, 2024
at 3:20 am
Thanks, Virginia. You’re lucky that you all have Ruth right there with you if you need to brush up on the cabling. That does sound like a very good solution and so nice that you get to use the product of your first spinning.
As for the drop spindle, I found a nice way to learn is to stand beside a friend who’s sitting on the sofa. They spin the spindle while you draft and control the movement of the twist. Once you have that part working well, you can try spinning the spindle on your own.
By: lavernewaddington on August 22, 2024
at 2:36 am
I wish I were going on the tour with Kate, but one of the ATA board members, Ercil, is a good drop spindle spinner and we have our retreat next month – maybe I can sit next to her on the sofa in the evenings to learn how to use a drop spindle. I have a couple of drop spindles that I picked up along the way – no idea of quality – but for starters they’ll do. Thanks for the motivation.
By: Virginia on August 22, 2024
at 7:55 am
Dear Laverne,
It is wonderful to hear of your spinning and wheel and spindle adventures. I wonder if the wheel made its way to the Falklands with a NZ volunteer-abroad teacher.
I am so glad you still spin with your tahkli, I have plenty of cotton here for you in Australia when you move. I fondly remember the last workshop I did with you. I need to spin cotton to weave now. I am definitely going to need a refresher workshop!
By: Elizabeth Woods on August 16, 2024
at 3:40 am
Hi Elizabeth. It’s so nice to hear from you. I must check in with my friend Emerald and see how she’s getting on with the cotton I got from you. Yes, I’ll be wanting some for myself when I get there and it would be great if we could have another weaving get together some time.
By: lavernewaddington on August 22, 2024
at 2:29 am
dear Laverne
my trad Ashford wheel was purchased from the Falkland Isle Wool co when they had a stand at a stitch and knit show in Edinburgh ( Scotland) about 37 years go. A short lesson nd a bag of beautiful Falkland wool and off I went.
That wheel is still used almost daily and I still have the sweater the wool turned into.
By: Alice Banks on August 16, 2024
at 6:31 am
Thanks for letting me know. That’s a great story. It’s a shame I didn’t get any wool myself when I had my connections there. Strangely, it never occurred to me. But at least I had the fleece from the Patagonian sheep. I know that the wheel would get used if I could have it in Australia but it just can’t be, sadly, and my budget won’t stretch to getting one over there. So, drop spindle it will be!
By: lavernewaddington on August 22, 2024
at 2:27 am
Laverne, as always you inspire me, all that you have done and continue to do. I also have an Ashford Traditional Spinning Wheel, and find that for most of the time I’ve owned it, it has become a decoration, which in itself is okay, as it looks lovely.
Your spinning and weaving has captivated me for years, and I recall last year about this time I warped my first backstrap project, and instantly became confused, I didn’t even understand weaving enough to realize it is a warp-faced weave, and I was asking you all sorts of questions about how to make it more balance, and yardage in warping; you were so very generous with your help, and I bought your books and pdfs to try to understand, but I didn’t get very far with that. Instead later in summer of 2023 I bought a rigid heddle loom, and then another, and then finally a rather large Ashford table loom. Let me say that in the last year I’ve come to better understand basic weaving structure, and these looms have allowed me to practice balanced plain weave, which is not easy to attain still with the right equipment.
Presently I would like to do some more spinning like you have done, and I am a person who somehow got all the equipment, but what I don’t have, is time, or better said, ability to delegate my time. So, this brings me to ask the most important question, as we readers of your blog see so much of your finished as well as in-progress works, that I at least think your super-power must be in goal-setting short term and long term. How do you get it all done? Do you write in a planner and have a calendar so-to-speak of what you are going to do in a slot of time on a given day, or, do you manage to float through your days just naturally super productive while not particularly having a plan?
Thanks again,
Jen
By: Jen on August 16, 2024
at 2:59 pm
Hi Jen. I’m really glad that you got a rigid heddle and table loom to get your first taste of weaving. I cringe sometimes when I see people recommending that someone tries a backstrap loom to see if they like weaving before spending money on other kinds of looms. It’s not an easy way to start from scratch and can sometimes put people off weaving altogether.
Getting into using a backstrap loom will be so much easier for you now. I hope it all goes to plan.
As for my time management, I’m very much about designating certain times of day to certain tasks and am big on giving myself rewards. If there are unpleasant or tedious things to be done, they’ll happen in the morning and then I’ll reward myself with weaving time after lunch. I do a cooked lunch every day as my main meal and spend some time over eating and maybe enjoying a tv show. That really divides the day nicely and then I’m set to weave.
I also make a point of starting to think about and plan my next project before I’ve finished the current one and I try not to start something new right after lunch….like winding a warp. I’ll do that last thing in the day so that the warp is ready to go on the loom the next day and I can get straight to work.
Thanks for your nice comments about my work and it’s really nice to hear from you.
By: lavernewaddington on August 22, 2024
at 2:22 am
Thank you as usual for your thorough reply! I agree; I think these days the best loom for beginners is a rigid heddle, and after understanding balanced weave should one try warp faced or even weft faced. That is in a world where everything is available, I’m sure in these cultures that weave backstrap, it is the only option, so who cares about balanced weave, etc. I will try to better plan my weaving schedule and am inspired by your commitment!
By: Jen on August 22, 2024
at 2:39 pm
ps. Oh, forgot to say: Now that I better understand warp-faced weaving, I want to warp up another backstrap loom project, Lavern style, as I have several pdf’s and books on the subject! 🙂
By: Jen on August 16, 2024
at 3:02 pm