I Bought an Antique Spinning Wheel to Spin My Own Thread

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2023
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Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @JillianEve
    @JillianEve Год назад +5413

    Your final thread looks fantastic! I'm thrilled I got to help you get started, and I can't wait to see what you spin up next. Happiest of happy spinning! 😊🧶🧵🪡✨💖

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Год назад +431

      I'm so lucky to have had your help! ✨

    • @CheapEngineerCrafts
      @CheapEngineerCrafts Год назад +68

      I was going to suggest Evie as a resource! So glad you connected already

    • @SusieQ3
      @SusieQ3 Год назад +51

      Evie is why I finally started spinning, too! It was something I always wanted to learn, but educational resources are so hard to find. So glad you're out here sharing your knowledge ❤

    • @chamberswagner2010
      @chamberswagner2010 Год назад +39

      Thank you for sharing about the flax seed water! I'm going to try that out. Even though I've been spinning for 20+ years, I'm just starting to learn how to spin flax and I also want to spin thread.

    • @fyrecraftedgaming
      @fyrecraftedgaming Год назад +12

      I was about to tell her to check out ur vids 😂

  • @CapriUni
    @CapriUni Год назад +4499

    Sometimes, when I stop to think about how, from the time of the earliest drop spindles we know about (~30 *thousand* years ago) until industrial spinning factories, Every. Single. Thread: every warp thread, every weft thread, in every piece of fabric -- from the clothes on people's backs, to the *sails on every sailing ship* -- was spun by hand, my mind kinds of shuts down at the magnitude of that.

    • @0meAcat1
      @0meAcat1 Год назад +113

      Enormity, gosh

    • @Vespuchian
      @Vespuchian Год назад +398

      Welcome to the world's second-largest historical industry after agriculture! And that's not even counting the stuff nearly every family made for their own use, I mean stuff made purely for sale.

    • @mildlysalted3271
      @mildlysalted3271 Год назад +160

      And it touched everyone. From the first person who twisted to now we are connected

    • @marthahawkinson-michau9611
      @marthahawkinson-michau9611 Год назад +151

      It was also one of the main respectable occupations for unmarried women.

    • @terrylopez5452
      @terrylopez5452 Год назад +149

      Yes. Spinster.

  • @supersnail5000
    @supersnail5000 Год назад +3910

    Ahh, so this is the 'threads' everyone has been talking about. Bernadette taking the fight to Elon Musk and winning 😌✊

    • @cheekyb71
      @cheekyb71 Год назад +81

      😂 underrated comment award 🏆

    • @darthbek
      @darthbek Год назад +32

      HIGHLY underrated comment.

    • @MsAnzoe
      @MsAnzoe Год назад +6

      @@cheekyb71 for sure!!

    • @fionafiona1146
      @fionafiona1146 Год назад +5

      Lovely

    • @jenn-k-h
      @jenn-k-h Год назад +7

      Lol 😂 NOW I understand 😏

  • @tangerinejukebox
    @tangerinejukebox 11 месяцев назад +911

    For anyone who got excited by this and feels like giving spinning a go, here are a few tips:
    1. Look out for a local spinning guild: They have a wealth of knowledge, will be super welcoming to newbies and often have old wheels lurking around that could become yours (that's how I acquired my first one)
    2. A spindle takes a lot less space: Consider trying spinning with a hand spindle. You can even 3d print one!
    3. Spin as traditional or as wild as you like: Incredible dyers and makers produce colourful fibre packs (see Hedgehog Fibres for example), so you can start with some soft and easy bluefaced leicester that will spin like butter, try flax if you feel bold. Or if you hate yourself, spin silk. IYKYK.
    4. There are no stupid questions: We all started with the same bird's nest of overtwisted, breaking fibres. Ask away!
    5. Keep your first thread: Doesn't matter if it looks like garden twine, it's a precious thing!
    And most of all, have fun. Oh and relax your shoulders! ;)

    • @diamondflaw
      @diamondflaw 11 месяцев назад +35

      I live in a smaller rural town and we just got a fiber and yarn store which has spinning supplies. I’m so excited.

    • @hanyodossta
      @hanyodossta 11 месяцев назад +22

      I've knitted for over a decade, and spinning my own yarn is something I've always wanted to give a try. Thanks for sharing these suggestions.

    • @flyawaysoul9152
      @flyawaysoul9152 11 месяцев назад +28

      Bonus tip: if you're afraid to committing to a wheel, grab or make your own drop spindle! They're tiny, cheap, and extremely effective

    • @MaiseNow
      @MaiseNow 11 месяцев назад +20

      Because of seeing this comment, I googled it and I am shocked to find I have a local fiber arts guild! Thank you for bringing this up, I never would have thought of this otherwise.

    • @fleecefriend9286
      @fleecefriend9286 11 месяцев назад +6

      Yes, all of this!

  • @sambluecoatandboatnerd2895
    @sambluecoatandboatnerd2895 11 месяцев назад +986

    That thread is perfect for hand-stitching leather! A chunky 2ply linen thread is exactly what I use to sew 18th century leather accoutrements--first I punch a hole through the leather and use two thick blunt needles with the thread coated in cobbler's wax and beeswax. It's great watching you learn how to make the materials I overlook when sewing.

    • @wilhelmschmidt7240
      @wilhelmschmidt7240 10 месяцев назад +32

      I was thinking it looked like the twine I use for my heavyweight leather stitching and I would use her thread for something like that.

    • @sirapple2406
      @sirapple2406 7 месяцев назад +2

      I was also thinking it looked a lot like welting thread used to stitch shoe welts.

  • @theprojectproject01
    @theprojectproject01 Год назад +4467

    2023: Bernadette spins linen thread
    2028: Bernadette mines the ore, smelts the iron, fires the blooms, and carbonizes the steel which is forged into the scythe that mows the flax.

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Год назад +1900

      Look, the crafty life is a dangerously slippery slope…

    • @theprojectproject01
      @theprojectproject01 Год назад +376

      ​@@bernadettebanner I hear ya buddy, I hear ya. I started off as a good honest wastrel with nothing on my mind but the next wench and the next drink. And look at me now! A steady job as a tradesman, and about 65 vintage sewing machines. Madness, I say, madness.

    • @professorrhyyt3689
      @professorrhyyt3689 Год назад +75

      But for flax being pulled from the field, roots and all, I can definitely envision it. :)

    • @ema2031
      @ema2031 Год назад +104

      @@professorrhyyt3689yes 100%! Would love to see a ”field to thread” journey of flax for Bernadette :)))

    • @tomfetter4011
      @tomfetter4011 Год назад +99

      It's a short leap to the woodworking skills to make the wheel(s) you discover you actually want.

  • @alyssaking4628
    @alyssaking4628 Год назад +1955

    As a self-taught spinner, the amount of stress I felt when Bernadette said she was going to learn to spin on flax was immense

    • @nimuek3107
      @nimuek3107 11 месяцев назад +148

      When I saw the Instagram promo reel for this video I was like, "of course she's starting with flax."🤣 Well done!

    • @floresilla
      @floresilla 11 месяцев назад +29

      What would be a good material to start spinning?

    • @alyssaking4628
      @alyssaking4628 11 месяцев назад +139

      @@floresilla a medium quality wool is usually best. Wool naturally grabs onto itself, and the rougher it is the more it'll do so, which makes it easier to draft without the fiber breaking!

    • @leekestner1554
      @leekestner1554 11 месяцев назад +66

      @@alyssaking4628 Don't go for the fine wools first. They take much more skill in drafting. Jump to them too quick and your thread will be full of slubs. Of course if you are wanting a character thread then jump in. As you go along and get good you may occasionally want character thread for a special project and be real annoyed that you can no longer spin "bad".

    • @grumpypotamus7143
      @grumpypotamus7143 11 месяцев назад +38

      I so feel this. I taught myself knitting on socks, thinking "oh, they're small, that should be easy". So sure, flax. Why not?
      Even I started spinning with coopworth and romney!

  • @br6480
    @br6480 11 месяцев назад +602

    My husband who is so not a crafter became quite enthralled watching Bernadette spin her own thread. When it came to the use of saliva,I started telling him that a lot of us who knit with wool do something called spit splice to connect wool when we’ve run out. Then all the questions started😂

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 11 месяцев назад +59

      I carry a small spray bottle with water in my needlebinding bag so that I don't have to rely on my salivâ. ^ ^

    • @GaySatanicClowns
      @GaySatanicClowns 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@johannageisel5390If you're going for aesthetic as well as practical use, I bet you could find one of those fancy little plant misters. I have a plastic spray bottle (for a completely different purpose) and it doesn't quite fit the vibe I'm going for, lol.

    • @eeaotly
      @eeaotly 9 месяцев назад +11

      @@johannageisel5390 More practical, less personal. :-)

  • @ericaschultz3583
    @ericaschultz3583 11 месяцев назад +453

    As a spinner, I'm quite impressed by how quickly you picked this skill up! There's a popular saying that every new spinner starts by making "novelty yarn," and I see that it holds true for linen as well, but you've given me new inspiration to learn to spin flax now!
    Excellent work, Ms. Banner

    • @terrarosa8181
      @terrarosa8181 11 месяцев назад +37

      😂 And then you talk to experienced spinners and they have mastered the spider web thin yarn and wish they could go back to making art yarn 😂 But their hands have learned the craft and it's hard to go back to wholesome chunky oatmeal yarn full of character ❤❤❤

    • @s.colins2050
      @s.colins2050 11 месяцев назад +12

      As a crochet fiber artist, I respect the hell out of you all, but please, lace weight kills me and my hands, so badly. Love the doubleknit and aran weights.

    • @makadoodledoo
      @makadoodledoo 8 месяцев назад +1

      I started by making yarn plies thin as thread and then had to learn to not sping things so thin and tight and to just let loose

  • @kathilisi3019
    @kathilisi3019 Год назад +1014

    When you mentioned getting a really strong ankle from treadling, I remembered an old German fairytale which is a bit like Rumpelstiltskin in that a girl is supposed to spin a seemingly impossible amount of thread before she's allowed to marry the king, but instead of a demon gnome she gets help from three experienced spinsters. One has an enormous foot from treadling, one has a sagging lower lip from wetting the thread, and the third one has a huge flat thumb from flattening the thread. All that they ask for in return for their help is to be invited to the wedding. The king notices their deformities and asks them why they look like that, they tell him it's from spinning flax all their lives. The king is horrified and tells his new wife never to spin flax again, and she's happy to comply.

    • @penname8441
      @penname8441 Год назад +2

      +

    • @lbmedium412
      @lbmedium412 Год назад +82

      Oh I think I read this once but I never would have remembered on my own. This really dragged up memories from abandonded parts of my brain 😅

    • @bluesSGL
      @bluesSGL Год назад +77

      There's a Irish or Scottish version in which the three sisters live underground in a mound and are implied to be supernatural beings

    • @amycox5733
      @amycox5733 Год назад +89

      I heard a similar one! But in my version, one of them helped her weave the thread into fabric, and had a broad, humped back from scuttling back and forth, bent over her loom, and the other had helped her sew the fabric into clothes, and had huge, bug eyes from staring at her sewing all day every day

    • @terrynelson7052
      @terrynelson7052 Год назад +70

      The Three Spinning Fairies by the brothers Grimm

  • @Namaikhan
    @Namaikhan Год назад +1209

    At what point does a loom show up and we have an ever-ambitious Bernadette weaving the linen she spun into cloth? 😂

    • @1DwtEaUn
      @1DwtEaUn Год назад +47

      I would hope a clock reel aka spinning weasel would show up before the loom

    • @kyrab7914
      @kyrab7914 Год назад +34

      You don't even technically need a loom, some cultures weave without them

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 11 месяцев назад +33

      @@kyrab7914 Finger-weaving's the natural next step.

    • @nimuek3107
      @nimuek3107 11 месяцев назад +83

      You think you're joking, but this is how it starts.

    • @RoxanneMarius
      @RoxanneMarius 11 месяцев назад +27

      2024. It's obviously one of the next steps 😂

  • @anna_in_aotearoa3166
    @anna_in_aotearoa3166 11 месяцев назад +411

    I have to say as somebody who attempted wheel spinning years ago, I was VERY impressed by how Bernadette basically went straight to treadling correctly & keeping the wheel from accidentally reversing direction! 😆 All her hours on the antique treadle sewing machine really, really paying off there.

  • @zoes_story
    @zoes_story 11 месяцев назад +212

    Heathcliff is absolutely marvelous. I love how chill they are.
    My first spinning projects looked like a unicorn vomited on the bobbin because I was using waste wool fibres to learn.
    All my Gran's spinning explanations to me are fraught with the phrase "it'll just feel right" getting bandied about with frustrating regularity. 😂

  • @SmileGioky98
    @SmileGioky98 11 месяцев назад +1222

    I work as an audio technician. What you said about many sounds from the past getting lost really resonated with me. Thanks for keeping craftsmanships like this one alive. Thank you.

    • @DoremiFasolatido1979
      @DoremiFasolatido1979 10 месяцев назад +16

      There's so much more lost than you'll ever realize. In everything. And more will be lost in the future too, even as it appears for the very first time.
      That's the nature of everything. It all ends. Missing it, or trying to hold on to any of it, is weakness.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@DoremiFasolatido1979 - Nostalgia is a powerful emotion.

    • @sourcererseven3858
      @sourcererseven3858 5 месяцев назад +3

      heh, resonated.

    • @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
      @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 3 месяца назад

      Yes, hearing a sound from the past that was lost but was brought back almost gives a shutter. One of the more powerful videos to watch is the first and to my knowledge only time since it’s voyage the RMS Titanic’s steam whistles were actuated for a group at a museum. It wasn’t quite the same as they were using compressed air instead of steam but it was truly a haunting sound. Another one is the recovery of the bell from the Great Lakes freighter Edmund Fitzgerald. As soon as it broke the surface of the water it began ringing out in the waves.

  • @friedelpretorius9217
    @friedelpretorius9217 6 месяцев назад +22

    I love the end comments about the online community being fundamentally the same as the communities we used to learn from in person. Such a poignant observation on how social media isn't just mind-dumbing content isolating people and making them feel lesser-than. It is a community hall where all sorts of interactions happen including exchanges of skills, passions, and stories. It's nice to know that while we might only get to hear the "voice" of the spinning wheel generations ago, future generations will be able to hear your voice and admiration for it. Thanks for making the moment to appreciate modern society while learning about historic society.

    • @Financiallyfreeauthor
      @Financiallyfreeauthor 4 месяца назад

      I’ve learned so so much online. I even managed to change the lock on ky front door by following a RUclips video. So many free tutorials! I love it

  • @sheeelashell143
    @sheeelashell143 11 месяцев назад +135

    The world 100% needs an ambient soundtrack of that spinning wheel
    It's so soothing

    • @paigestanley3026
      @paigestanley3026 10 месяцев назад +5

      ASMR track would be ❤bliss❤. CONGRATS Bernadette for taking up & conquering a new skill🎉.

  • @violetofthevalley
    @violetofthevalley Год назад +693

    When I was taught to spin I told my teacher I wanted to spin angora rabbit and cat fur. They told me to start with wool. I did, but didn’t get very far before I gave up. 20 years later I came back to the hobby and started spinning cat hair and this time I stuck with it long enough to become proficient (and I can actually enjoy spinning wool now). I’m glad you persisted and started with what actually interested you.

    • @LiamAmazarashi
      @LiamAmazarashi Год назад +20

      that is so cool!!! do you make something with your amazing thread?

    • @gayleklein7243
      @gayleklein7243 Год назад +55

      Something I've picked up from years of crocheting is that Alaskan Husky, bison and yak hair are the warmest when fashioned into a garment. I'm now wondering if Maine Coon and Siberian cats produce denser fur that would have the same effect.

    • @MsBlulucky
      @MsBlulucky Год назад +10

      That's amazing! I never would have thought that you could spin cat hair. Isn't it too short?

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Год назад +45

      ​​@@gayleklein7243I'd suspect Norwegian forest cats or Maine Coons can definitely make fine thread, don't know how warm it'll be, but worth testing.
      If you have a zoo nearby that houses Manuls/Pallas cats, asking them for a measure of shedded fur could also be interesting to try as they have the densest fur of ALL felines, big and small! 😊

    • @queenebil
      @queenebil Год назад +1

      :O

  • @jasminv8653
    @jasminv8653 Год назад +540

    In Finnish the sound of a cat's 'purr' is called 'spinning yarn' (kehrätä). I don't think we've got another common word for it, or if we did at some point, at least we don't anymore. It really sounds exactly like a spinning wheel whirring away :)

    • @professorrhyyt3689
      @professorrhyyt3689 Год назад +40

      Same in Swedish.

    • @Nikki-tx6kh
      @Nikki-tx6kh Год назад +32

      That's so cute. I'm learning Finnish and your language feels very cat friednly. I keep finding words that would make good cat names, like Mukava, Kuka or Hauska.

    • @lesni_panna9930
      @lesni_panna9930 Год назад +28

      Same in Czech (spins = přede)!

    • @sophiaeressea5687
      @sophiaeressea5687 Год назад +23

      Can confirm for German, too

    • @friedasorber1653
      @friedasorber1653 Год назад +21

      Same in Dutch

  • @mtncreekdawn
    @mtncreekdawn 11 месяцев назад +120

    This is perfect timing. My siblings & I recently inherited our great-aunt's small spinning wheel. I'm the only one who remembers watching her spin, but that was decades ago. A practical video is just what we needed!

  • @WitchyGeek
    @WitchyGeek 11 месяцев назад +63

    Don't forget to condition your thread after you've spun it. Basically, you run it through a flax seed bath to smooth down the fibers. That might help to make sewing easier in the beginning of a new thread, since it has already been smoothed down and the fabric doesn't have to do that part. My teacher showed us to take a small pot lid with the kind of handle that's not a knob. Then you make enough of the flax seed water to cover the pot lid in a bowl large enough to hold the lid and you run the thread under the handle. That way you can just roll it from bobbin to bobbin while smoothing the fiber that comes out of the water, as the lid takes the thread under the water for you.

    • @lb5368
      @lb5368 11 месяцев назад +1

      Great advice!

    • @froggydoodle808
      @froggydoodle808 10 месяцев назад +2

      You do this in addition to using flax water during spinning? Do you do it before or after plying? And does it take the place of waxing the thread?

    • @WitchyGeek
      @WitchyGeek 10 месяцев назад +7

      @froggydoodle808 I'd probably do it before plying, to get the smoothest threads, so yes, also in addition to spinning with flax water. I'd still wax, though, as that adds protection and strength for the thread to pass through the fabric many times without starting to fray too much. But as Bernadette said, after several initial passes through the fabric, it did become a bit easier since that smoothed the thread somewhat, and that's the smoothing you should be achieving by the pass through flax water after spinning to make it easier when you start sewing.

  • @MlleRebeccaJade
    @MlleRebeccaJade Год назад +540

    I once worked in a museum with a “great wheel” or “walking wheel,” which you have to spin with your hand (no treadle), and do it standing up. They are a lot older than the seated treadle wheel. The bobbin ends in a point and the fibre kind of slips off that point to create twist. I was told Sleeping Beauty pricked her finger on this type of wheel.

    • @1DwtEaUn
      @1DwtEaUn Год назад +19

      The BOOK CHARKHA an Indian(country) spinning machine works similarly

    • @jenthulhu
      @jenthulhu Год назад +39

      That makes a lot more sense than the Disney bastardization.

    • @jenthulhu
      @jenthulhu Год назад +5

      That makes a lot more sense than the Disney bastardization.

    • @jeanjaz
      @jeanjaz 11 месяцев назад +30

      Disney changes everything.
      My brother read "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" to his kids before he let them watch the Disney animated version.

    • @tanja-k
      @tanja-k 11 месяцев назад +16

      I think it was Tudor Farm that had a demonstration of the walking wheel in practice. It was a first for me, seeing a walking wheel as we only use sitting ones back home.

  • @ellenwood719
    @ellenwood719 Год назад +271

    In 1995, Tasha Tudor, American author, illustrator, and heirloom crafter, released a book titled Tasha Tutor's Heirloom Crafts. In it, she tells the story of weaving and sewing a linen shirt for her brother. She started by planting the seeds, and 3 years later, she finished the shirt. A picture of it can be seen across from the title page. You do such beautiful work.

    • @1DwtEaUn
      @1DwtEaUn Год назад +9

      That's impressive, just getting the retting right for good quality could take that long if doing dew retting ...

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 11 месяцев назад +10

      There's a RUclips series called How To Make Everything that does that sort of stuff to highlight how much work it takes to make one thing. A turkey sandwich, with this method, took 6 months and $1500.

    • @froggydoodle808
      @froggydoodle808 10 месяцев назад

      I know that name... She illustrated one of my childhood books....
      Edit: I found it! The Secret Garden (and also A Little Princess)

  • @laurenthomas6267
    @laurenthomas6267 11 месяцев назад +30

    At a local SCA event someone was doing a class on spinning and they were talking about how the typical medieval thread was around 30/2 which feels super thick to us modern people, but is super reasonable when you know they were spinning by hand!

  • @macprofire
    @macprofire 11 месяцев назад +65

    As someone who once went through the entire process from raw sheep’s wool, scouring, combing and finally spinning it - what you did there after only days of practice is amazing. Btw. you motivated me to get a sewing machine. A Singer from 1900 ^^

  • @melimsah
    @melimsah Год назад +134

    So THAT'S what they mean by "flaxen hair". I never knew what flax looked like! I always figured it was more like cotton

    • @sherryhassler5932
      @sherryhassler5932 Год назад +36

      There was line flax and tow flax (still is). Line flax is the long, very nicely behaved stuff, and then we called the fabric line-in, or linen. The tow flax is short and coarse, and was used to make rope- then we called it "tow rope". From that we get "tow headed" kids, and "tow" as a verb as well as the rope.

    • @janetmackinnon3411
      @janetmackinnon3411 Год назад +3

      @@sherryhassler5932 Thank you for this information.

    • @yalissa73
      @yalissa73 Год назад +8

      Some naturally/ old, old way processed flax can have this golden color with an almost silk like sheen as well.

    • @sherryhassler5932
      @sherryhassler5932 Год назад +3

      @@yalissa73 It depends on how it's retted (rotted). If it's kept in standing water, it turns one color, if it's in a river, it turns a different sheen- one of them turns gold, the other silver and I can't remember which is which.

  • @TheSeptemberRose
    @TheSeptemberRose Год назад +513

    I love that you had to have an actual human being to show you how to do it. Skills used to be passed from one person to the next, not just from books. Books were there as a guide, but having an actual skilled mentor was always the better way to learn things.

    • @translarrybutz
      @translarrybutz Год назад +13

      Its like how it wouldve been taught in the past
      Seeing it in this video makes me feel a weird sense of nostolgia, or a connection to the countless generations this skill was passed down between

    • @jessicanicolebelmonte6252
      @jessicanicolebelmonte6252 Год назад +15

      That is such a validation for me. Back in the 1970s and 1980s the teachers in elementary and high school expected us to "learn" by memorizing and accepting on blind faith. Even with above average intelligence I just barely managed to graduate high school in spite of the teaching system. And then I "failed" in university. Since then I have realized that I learn best, and get long term retention of what I learned, by hands-on-training. The so-called hands-on learning. A patient mentor is so important to achieve the best learning (at least for me)! Training manuals will only go so far. But the interactive brain-storming with a mentor just elevates the skill retention to a whole new level.
      Unfortunately the learning-by-doing skills I achieved have no documentation to back them up, so "marketing" myself in a society suffering from title-itis is virtually impossible. Because I have been told way too often: "If you do not have a paper to certify you learned the skill, you do not know anything. Good bye!"

    • @Rosy.Cusson
      @Rosy.Cusson Год назад +18

      I love that it looked like Heathcliff just popped out of nowhere, like a magical godparent here to help you figure out spinning.

    • @crwilley
      @crwilley Год назад +6

      Oh gosh yes. You *can* learn from videos, but there's nothing quite like learning from an actual human teacher.

    • @candace200
      @candace200 11 месяцев назад +2

      This is still true today IMO. We rely on the convenience of learning from home, but I hope we revert back to in-person learning.

  • @StacySchulze-cg1he
    @StacySchulze-cg1he 11 месяцев назад +47

    Just in time to join the Tour de Fleece! Welcome to the world of Spinsters! When I taught spinning, I once had a student who absolutely wanted to start with flax because she wanted to spin and weave a linen canvas to paint upon. Yes, she struggled more than the folks using wool, but she got a good start on her end goal. As a side note for easier learning, the flax fibers have their own natural twist which means that twisting them S will be much easier than Z. (The wheel spins counter clockwise for a S twist.)

  • @libbyheeren
    @libbyheeren 11 месяцев назад +15

    So sweet to see!! My grandmother taught me to spin when I was about 5-6, and I still have our family spinning wheel that has been passed down through 7 generations of women.

  • @lulumoon9
    @lulumoon9 Год назад +643

    It just makes me so happy that Bernadette's little corner of the InterWebs exists so that geeks like us can totally geek out over learning how to do something thousands of years old!

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement 11 месяцев назад

      Use of a spinning wheel is not thousands of years old.

    • @reavanante2160
      @reavanante2160 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@direfranchementThere are Egyptian murals that show them being used. They wore gauze looking garments.

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement 11 месяцев назад

      @@reavanante2160 Not likely.

  • @EmoryLuceBaldwin
    @EmoryLuceBaldwin Год назад +454

    I will NEVER wear a linen blouse again without respecting the wisdom and effort and skill that goes into it’s history. Just thinking about what that phrase “fine linen” actually means is so humbling! Thanks again Bernadette for broadening my mind ❤

    • @kathleenstoin671
      @kathleenstoin671 Год назад +19

      And this is just the spinning process! Growing the flax and then preparing the fibers for spinning is also a very long, arduous process. The Egyptians excelled at producing very fine linen, and some of their skills have been lost. But linen is a wonderful fabric, and it's a shame we don't use more of it.

    • @OnePaperPlane
      @OnePaperPlane Год назад +1

      Linen is a magical fabric. I hate working with it, but the finished results are always worth it

    • @theladyamalthea
      @theladyamalthea Год назад +1

      Riiiiiiight! A whole new appreciation! I love historical learning.

    • @amylenertz1953
      @amylenertz1953 11 месяцев назад

      And spinning wheels are relatively recent.

    • @kathleenstoin671
      @kathleenstoin671 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@amylenertz1953 Spinning wheels apparently originated in India between 500 AD and 1000 AD. Europe got them in the 13th century. Ancient Egyptians used drop spindles.

  • @MichaelTargaryen8809
    @MichaelTargaryen8809 11 месяцев назад +33

    its so sweet how when u are sewing at the end you can see you fighting back such a genuine smile for the sake of the experiment but you are so clearly overjoyed at the creation and use of your own string its adorable!!

  • @anyawillowfan
    @anyawillowfan 11 месяцев назад +39

    Watching this is a good reminder of just how much we take for granted - even those of us who sew usually can buy whatever thread and fabric we want in any colour, which is mind boggling when you consider how hard it would have been to do the most basic things.

  • @tstymctst
    @tstymctst Год назад +329

    Everyone I know who spins does so to make worsted, chunky, or bulky weight yarn. It's wild to watch someone throw themselves into the deep end on flax spun to thread weight! Very impressive, Ms Banner.

    • @AirQuotes
      @AirQuotes Год назад +14

      When has she ever taken the easy path on anything

    • @heatherduke7703
      @heatherduke7703 Год назад +3

      I think it’s great. I never understood the chunky stuff. I wondered, does hand woven stuff look so awful because people can’t make fine thread anymore? Nope, they just don’t care enough to go at it this obsessively 😆

    • @amylenertz1953
      @amylenertz1953 Год назад +7

      Spinning fine is easier for most people than spinning thick.

    • @jenthulhu
      @jenthulhu Год назад +12

      Personally, I run hot, so I spin very fine. Not exactly frogshair, but I make a light fingering-weight yarn out of 2-3 plies. That way, once woven or knit, it won't be excessively warm and I might actually wear the garments I make. I've only spun wool so far--and there are so many delightful breeds to explore that I haven't even ventured into the realm of cellulose fibers yet. I like to buy fleeces and wash and process them by hand to prepare them for spinning. I feel very connected to the past when I do that.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@heatherduke7703 You go through phases, not drafting so everything's a clump, over-drafting so everything's brittle, then discovering clumps happen, until you start carding properly so your feedstock isn't on a spindle, but lies in loose floofy rolags which will never clump, but produce gossamer thread.
      The next stage is to ply, so she'll be using a hank winder to free her bobbins, then a winder to make a centre-feed ball, and finally a lazy kate while she learns how to make the wheel turn backwards.
      However, don't forget this is linen thread, and she's at heart a sewer, so needs lace in copious quantities. Linen lace is far better quality.

  • @saraa3418
    @saraa3418 Год назад +290

    I keep wanting to come into the screen and help you! For flax, you'll want to mist your fiber and keep your fingers moist. You'll also want to use a smaller whorl on your spinning wheel. The double drive wheels are labor saving devices, by using a smaller whorl, you can get a faster twist on your yarn while maintaining comfortable treadling. Your first yarns are probably going to be thick and uneven, it's part of the process, but I would still encourage you to find a use for them. It's so empowering to be able to look at where you started and see how far you've come. The first cotton I spun, I crocheted into an ornament I hung by my desk. The first wool I spun I knit into a trivet and use it almost every day to protect my table, it's almost felted from use, but I know it was the first thing I ever made from fiber.

  • @prideandsensibility
    @prideandsensibility 9 месяцев назад +16

    The natural progression of her channel is eventually creating her own historically accurate materials, so I’m unsurprised, but VERY HAPPY SHES DOING IT. love to see it. ❤

  • @erinabroad3083
    @erinabroad3083 11 месяцев назад +9

    Your reflections on the historical connections felt by participating in the fiber arts really resonated with me. My mom taught me how to crochet but I never really had a community where I could gather resources and learn about innovative techniques but now that I've moved to the UK I'm finding loads of resources, communities, and even the local knitting groups are a source of knowledge and community that I cherish. I hope you enjoy your new spinning journey!

  • @dragonmaster5983
    @dragonmaster5983 Год назад +295

    It always fascinates me how before there was mass production of simple things we take for granted like a spool of thread, people had to make from scratch.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Год назад +19

      'Make me a sandwich' has a whole new meaning when everything has to be made in-house or isn't mass-produced.

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Год назад +10

      @@julietfischer5056 "Go plant some f*cking wheat first"

    • @emiliobustamante2401
      @emiliobustamante2401 Год назад +4

      I ripped a hole on my jeans, and it took me 15 minutes to fire up the sowing machine, fetch a patch of clothing and spindle of thread and fix it up. In olden times that process, especially if you didnt have the spare cloth and thread, or could not buy it, might have taken an entire day. Its hard for us modern people just how much of their spare time people "wasted" on domestic chores and other things that takes us moments

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Год назад +1

      @@ealusaid- The guy who wanted the sandwich does that part, at least where farming uses plows.

  • @helenmcclory5676
    @helenmcclory5676 Год назад +254

    The flax thread looks so much like grey hair, it's like the friendly grandmotherly spirit of all spinners is propped up beside you as you work

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад +16

      Ever heard of a flaxen blondes? That's where it comes from.

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 Год назад +5

      @@parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Now we would call it dirty blonde, which I never liked. flaxen sounds much better. It was assigned to people with light brown hair that easily sun bleached to blonde on top. Not to silver grey hair, which seems more appropriate.

    • @Eloraurora
      @Eloraurora Год назад +5

      @@rich1051414 IIRC, linen fiber can have either warm or cool undertones, depending on the water used during the retting process (rainwater vs. well water.)

    • @jw8223
      @jw8223 Год назад +8

      Tow head (someone with extremely white blonde hair) comes from flax, also. There are two types of fiber that come from flax, line flax that is spun into fine linen threads, and the shorter fibers are called tow, that usually make a coarser twine or yarn

    • @elfieblue3175
      @elfieblue3175 Год назад +7

      @@jw8223 You beat me to it. "Tow-headed" also had connotations of unkempt appearance, often a lad who worked hard outdoors.

  • @kimsmithhappy
    @kimsmithhappy 10 месяцев назад +19

    As someone who has been spinning for about 15 years, this is going to be so interesting to watch! I run an ethical yarn shop with a victorian/cozy vibe and I'm really looking forward to seeing how you get on with flax! It's a very fun but challenging fibre to work with :)

  • @BlackVoidsRevenge
    @BlackVoidsRevenge 11 месяцев назад +21

    I want more videos of guests teaching you how to do things! This was so much fun to watch!

  • @blackhagalaz
    @blackhagalaz Год назад +177

    As someone who has been spinning for over a decade now, I am very impressed with your progress :). You did very good and made some high quality thread in the end with a very feisty material at that. To be honest starting spinning right with a wheel is veeeery hard. So for everyone who would like to learn this I would recommend using a hand-spindle, because you can easily "pause" the rotation at any time and concentrate better on the tention you are letting into the fibres :). The wheel will just rip the thread out of your hand if you are not fast enough. That said another thing that is worth mentioning with spinning wheels is that the circumfence of the spindle itself, will influence how much tension goes into the thread. This is not so much an issue with the historic wheel, because there is only one spindle size available, but modern hand spindles and wheels will often come with different spindle sizes. That's something to be aware of when you first start. Also the tention gauge on you wheel will not only determine how hard you can treddle, but on some wheels it will also determine how fast the thread gets pulled in, and get wound on the bobbin. That is if the wheel has a "bobbin-break". I really hope all this terms make sense though since I am translating from German :).
    Anyway this is a very cool video on spinning. I never heard about the flax-water, I only ever used tabwater. So this is something new I learned and will try out, thank you❤.
    PS: Netflix and relaxing Spinning will be eventually forever entwined, don't you worry bernadette. Just takes time and practice. I am currently working on spinning some weaving-yarn, while watching old medical-detectives episodes. A gril needs her murderous-grandma antics❤😂

    • @daalelli
      @daalelli Год назад

      Such helpful information!

  • @thealphafox64
    @thealphafox64 Год назад +332

    I love how you view these kinds of crafts as a way to connect with so many generations before us, doing the same work, hearing the same sounds and sharing the experience - a very humbling and wholesome perspective I can’t help but marvel at

    • @carolinavenger
      @carolinavenger Год назад +13

      I feel that way whenever I'm kneading dough by hand or making my own pasta. I never feel more connected to my ancestors

    • @annapruitt5546
      @annapruitt5546 11 месяцев назад

      It is inspiring and beautiful! Making things with your hands feels so good, and it does connect you to humanity. You realize that humans have been making incredible things forever, that ability to create is a big part of us.
      I’ve recently started my sewing journey, and it makes me think about the fact that people have been making these things forever. Sometimes when I get discouraged with my sewing progress, I remind myself it’s a skill I can and will learn, and I will be able to make my clothing like people have done for generations before me and hopefully generations after me.
      It makes me sad when I think about all of the amazing trades and art forms that have been lost to time. Every time I see some beautiful, intricate object that was made by someone’s hands however many years ago, I feel this huge sense of awe and admiration. There are some really impressive pieces that sometimes baffle me like how in the world did someone make this hundreds of years ago? It’s even more impressive if we aren’t able to replicate it to the same level of quality today. It would be so cool to do intense research and experimentation to try recreating these past skills & techniques, while using modern equipment and technology to our advantage. Imagine relearning these trades and teaching people, training more talented craftspeople, and passing on the knowledge to keep it alive!

  • @TheBeautyJournals
    @TheBeautyJournals 11 месяцев назад +21

    I’ve been waiting for this since you got your spinning wheel. I’m relatively new to spinning and have so far only made one jumper with hand spun wool. I love that you got Jillian involved her channel is amazing!

  • @TheWelshViking
    @TheWelshViking 11 месяцев назад +2

    Oh, I love a bit of wheel spinning, It’s so much faster than a drop spindle. Go you!

  • @ellenbakulina6997
    @ellenbakulina6997 Год назад +263

    I have been waiting for a spinning video for a long time, because the spinning wheel has been in the background in Bernadette's videos for some time! Also, I appreciate how she is not afraid to show herself learning, rather than filming only when she has acquired the skill already.

  • @essirockarmen9799
    @essirockarmen9799 Год назад +149

    This is so fun to watch! I live in a region of Sweden that used to be famous for growing and refining flax so it is a big part of our local culture. There is a project to lift this heritage even more, where anyone can get seeds to grow a square meter of the special flax for weaving and then meeting up with others to learn how to process it like back in the days. I’m so excited to see you really going back to basics with flax 🤩

    • @C.L.Hinton
      @C.L.Hinton Год назад

      Is there tourism around learning the way it was done there and learning your regional style?

    • @essirockarmen9799
      @essirockarmen9799 11 месяцев назад

      @@C.L.Hinton yes!

  • @erinpanjer6768
    @erinpanjer6768 11 месяцев назад +5

    I taught myself how to spin from books when I was a teenager, I am thoroughly impressed how quickly you picked this up. I’ve been spinning for 20 years now and I haven’t touched Flax because I’m intimidated by it, and I love the feel of wool and silks, and working with them. I just happen to be reading some of the history on flax spinning. Ancient Egyptians were best at this art, the finest linens, The threads are spun one fibre thin. They had a bowl with a loop at the bottom where you would put your linen inside and the fibres would go through the water under the loop as you spin. They used a drop spindle, I understand it was spun by rolling it down the thigh, but there was a very specific reason for the kind of drop spindle they used in the way that the fibres go so that they’re less likely to come apart. Personally I find it easier to make a really fine things on a drop spindle versus a spinning wheel.

  • @Quokka_J
    @Quokka_J 9 месяцев назад +6

    Whenever I think of spinning, I always think of Spirited Away and Zeniba's warm/cozy cottage in the swamp. It's so beautiful to watch something so delicate and though I know how much effort goes into it (as a fellow craftwoman), it always looks so... effortless and calming. I can just imagine how much focus goes into making sure whatever you're spinning works and doesn't just fall apart.
    I also have to say I love the sound of the wheel as well

  • @nerdlover101gc
    @nerdlover101gc Год назад +85

    just think. Some person in the past also struggled with this. and seeing you "spin your skirt in" probably happened a million times. i love history and history-bounding. Your videos give me a sense of wonder and nostalgia.

    • @leemasters3592
      @leemasters3592 Год назад +20

      I know accidentally catching your clothing in your embroidery or hand sewing is a struggle as old as sewing itself.

    • @lajoyous1568
      @lajoyous1568 Год назад +19

      I personally have crocheted and knit my hair into a project, so I imagine it would happen with spinning as well.

    • @georgeharrisonfricklas7927
      @georgeharrisonfricklas7927 Год назад +2

      @@leemasters3592 i love reading old brit lit because of how often home crafts are mentioned and talked about at length. I especially love reading about characters who are sewing or spinning and become lost in thought only to realize they've sewn/spun themselves or their clothing into their work. i recall reading a book where someone was spinning and spun a lock of their long hair into their yarn, and ended up having to cut a good chunk of it off their head 😆so goofy so relatable

    • @StacySchulze-cg1he
      @StacySchulze-cg1he 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@georgeharrisonfricklas7927 I have long hair, and once, while trying to fix the treadle connection on a spinning wheel, my long braid got caught in the hooks on the flyer. Luckily, I didn’t have to cut my hair, but I did require help to free myself.

  • @juliecanknit2
    @juliecanknit2 Год назад +117

    A trick for smoother plied thread: re-wind your singles before plying so the first fiber you ply is the first section of singles spun. Now your hands will be smoothing down the plied thread in the same direction that it smoothed the singles!

  • @claudiadarling9441
    @claudiadarling9441 11 месяцев назад +18

    Congratulations Bernadette. I completely relate to wanting to jump to the hard version of something first, cause the easy beginner version is too boring to hold my interest. Additionally, I feel your videos are getting more spontaneous and joyous in feel, even though I'm sure they are a great deal of work. You've really developed as a teacher/presenter.

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln 11 месяцев назад +4

      I feel you on the "easy is too boring" situation! That's me in a nutshell 😂

    • @aaronbredon2948
      @aaronbredon2948 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not only is the 'easy' version often boring, there are often significant differences between the versions that makes the jump from 'easy' to 'hard' more difficult.
      In this example, linen has certain traits that wool does not that one can use to improve the result. One of which is the self-gluing ability.
      Linen also has long fibers as compared to cotton or wool.
      Also, depending on the amount of processing of the linen, you get fibers suitable for different things.
      And learning on better quality source material is very helpful. Then at least you know that any failure is from your lack of skill, not an inherent problem with the material.
      I have done woodworking, and, like most, started on cheap wood like pine or poplar. But the moment I started working with high quality oak, I realized that trying to learn on poor quality wood was a big part of the problem - oak is just so much easier to work with that you spend less time learning.

  • @SuperRodriguez2005
    @SuperRodriguez2005 11 месяцев назад +6

    I have been teaching myself how to drop spin tooo! My grandmother used to spin her own yarn, then weave it into fabric. She also dyed her own thread with garden vegs.

  • @OdinsSage
    @OdinsSage Год назад +169

    The amount of joy that radiates from a fellow artist when they're excited about the success of a new craft is truly infectious.

  • @BeyondtheHiggs
    @BeyondtheHiggs Год назад +65

    Videos like this are why are you THE Victorian Mob Boss of the Internet!!!! I am literally watching this while I sew false buttons onto a victorian inspired skirt I am making from a bedsheet I dyed. Which BTW I wouldn't have had the courage to try without your videos. Thank You!

    • @cheekyb71
      @cheekyb71 Год назад

      That sounds very cool, well done you ❤

  • @THandP_org
    @THandP_org 11 месяцев назад +4

    I once made this journey, and the (lack of) differences between spinning flax and spinning hemp....
    Made me quite happy once the US stopped its ban on hemp cloth so I could simply buy what I needed😅
    Bird sounds and rain in the background make almost all tasks easier, arthritis and fibromyalgia have changed my hobbies however.
    Thanks for another great video Bernadette!!!
    (Please let your sibling know that the editing is continuing to evolve and exceed expectations)

  • @DianeDonald
    @DianeDonald 11 месяцев назад +5

    I loved watching you learn this wonderful skill! One thing I didn't see in any comments as a fellow antique wheel user, it is very important to be gentle with your wheel and oil it frequently just the way you do with an older sewing machine. I actually use sewing machine oil for this. It makes spinning so much easier (and quieter), especially on a double-drive wheel. Every point where something moves should be oiled regularly, like every 40 hours of spinning or so, and giving the wood some love and care once or twice a year is a good idea too. I use a beeswax/coconut oil mix on my wheel, take it apart, wipe the pieces down with a damp cloth, let them dry, cover them in the wood conditioner, let it sit for a while, then rub in with a dry cloth. This will keep the oil from drying out and breaking.

  • @Eloraurora
    @Eloraurora Год назад +35

    Sidebar: for anyone looking to buy a used wheel, watch out for decorative ones from the 70s. My dad got me one from a garage sale, and I _could not_ figure out how to get it working. I eventually dragged it out to the park to ask the local SCA, and they explained that it had never been made to function. It didn't have an orifice for the yarn to pass through, and it could scarcely treadle.

    • @VeretenoVids
      @VeretenoVids Год назад +5

      Really anyone looking to buy an antique should ask someone knowledgeable to look over the wheel. There are many out there that are intact, but so many that are missing vital parts. Some of those parts can be remade by a talented woodworker (and some people have been experimenting with 3D printing), but there are a lot of bits where if they are gone, the wheel is pretty much no longer functional.

    • @susancorbett8155
      @susancorbett8155 11 месяцев назад +1

      That's what Evie would call a spinning wheel shaped object. She has done a video on them.

  • @cathcoll7961
    @cathcoll7961 Год назад +76

    I spin my own alpaca and sheep wool. I adore my own spinning wheel. Her name is Gert. Once spun, the yarn I crochet into blankets. Everything done on our farm. From my own alpacas and sheep. So well done on starting your spinning journey Bernadette ❤️

    • @loewenalia
      @loewenalia Год назад +4

      My big wheel is named Sleeping Beauty, she looks like the wheel from the story. My travel wheel doesn't have a name yet, I have only had her for a few months.

    • @cathcoll7961
      @cathcoll7961 Год назад +2

      @@loewenalia I love your big wheels name 😀❤️ I am at the stage in my life now at 54. I would love a smaller travelling one, that I could pop in my horse drawn cart for country ambles. I feel it takes time finding the right name. It took me about 2 years to find Gert’s name. She certainly has a cheeky spirit about her. I am sure some days she doesn’t think I should be spinning. As when I start it just seem as comfortable. So I move to my crochet. I am sure her old wood sighs thank you 😀❤️

    • @Nellymynell
      @Nellymynell Год назад +1

      ​@@loewenaliaMy big wheel is Dolly, my travel is Betty, and I have a non-functional gal who goes by Millie. I love that we're out here naming our inanimate objects we spend so much time working with!
      PS My sewing machine is Ethel.😂

    • @loewenalia
      @loewenalia Год назад +3

      @@cathcoll7961 My big wheel does not like to move. When I move her to vacuum I have to spend time adjusting her after moving. She is on the mat and I just pull the mat across the carpet. I need to spin more but my corgi seems to think that when I sit at my wheel she needs ALL the attention.

  • @narelle3669
    @narelle3669 11 месяцев назад +8

    In an earlier video you made you told us all to never stop learning. I love how you back up your words with actions. I can't imagine how stressful it must have been for you to learn something new in front of millions of viewers, but you did it! You are a very strong person. Thank you for being vulnerable and so humble. It really displays your inner strength. Thank you also for demonstrating to all of us not to be afraid of failure. It's a learning opportunity. You are a wonderful teacher 🤗

  • @adrianpain1052
    @adrianpain1052 10 месяцев назад +2

    Great to see how it works. A friend of mine has tea towel made of linen which was woven by her grandma (the granny also made the thread)
    Its her most precious heritage 🤗

  • @loco4636
    @loco4636 Год назад +33

    If I may add my advice: Keep your beginning spinning! You'd be surprised that you will find a use for it eventually even if it's slubby and whatever. And it's a good reminder of how far you have come! I think you'll find it pleasing to spin your own yarn too if you knit or weave. Happy spinning!

  • @XenonFae
    @XenonFae Год назад +317

    As always I am incredibly impressed not only with your passion to learn new skills and document that learning process, but with your dedication and perseverance in the learning process!
    Time and again you keep going despite set backs and frustrations in the learning, creative, or construction process, and that is just such an inspiration for the rest of us who also struggle with the process! If Bernadette doesn’t give up, than neither will I! ❤

    • @krissykriss328
      @krissykriss328 Год назад +1

      Beautiful sentiment, and I agree with you!❤

  • @shroomyk
    @shroomyk 11 месяцев назад +2

    I love that there is such a wonderful community of people keeping these old crafts alive and not losing those little secrets that make it work. When something is forgotten, it is gone forever. Thank you to everyone who learns and teaches these skills. They might not seem super useful or relevant in today's world, but it still seems important to me. There are already many things mankind has forgotten because they were not recorded or were simply lost to time. I think it is a huge shame when it happens. Fact: The art of origami almost disappeared forever. There are indeed some designs that have been lost and forgotten.

  • @RocketStarling
    @RocketStarling 11 месяцев назад +7

    This was SO soothing to watch! It's incredible to watch you learn it so quickly - I kept thinking how necessary apprenticeships must have been for these types of things, learning from others, like Jillian taught you. As someone who studies sociolinguistics, I loved your reflections on the sounds, the "languages" of time past, and how we've lost them to time. Thank you for sharing!

  • @LXWiseman
    @LXWiseman Год назад +26

    I never fully appreciated the sheer volume of human labor it took to produce textiles until I watched this. Just imagining someone making all the thread and all the fabric to create a single dress... that would be the work of weeks, for one garment. Amazing to see. Thanks for helping me learn that!

  • @Strampunch
    @Strampunch Год назад +86

    Oh, that speech about the sounds and the language of the past still living through the machines and tools that have survived really hit my heart good. And very interesting note about how saliva affects the fibers, I was wondering about it being used instead of plain water just because of this story I was told as a kid, titled something like "The Three Spinners" (about three old spinners, each one of them with a physical modification caused by decades in the trade: one with a big foot after pressing the pedal, another with big thick fingers from twisting the fibers... and one with a big lower lip from licking the fingers so as to wet the fibers!) so the use of saliva to spin is definitely part of folk tales!
    This is a world I know nothing about but I loved the little taste you gave us , and of course the presentation is lovely and aesthetically pleasing while still being clear and informative.
    P.D. please tell Heathcliff I love their vibes and I'm a big fan of their hair style!

    • @lesliemoiseauthor
      @lesliemoiseauthor Год назад +1

      I'm revising my historical novel about Julian of Norwich, and when I heard Bernadette say that, I spontaneously shouted, "YES!"

    • @kayerin5749
      @kayerin5749 Год назад +5

      Beatrix Potter uses this in a story in "The Fairy Caravan" where an old fairy helps a lazy youg girl with her spinning so she can marry her love. Quite suggestive story in many ways, although it goes over the heads of young readers, I'm sure. If you can get a copy of this book, with illustrations by Miss Potter (it's quite rare) you will love all the old stories of her beloved Lake District. It's way overlooked and I think one of the best of her books.

    • @saraa3418
      @saraa3418 Год назад +2

      Saliva is traditionally used in many fiber arts. When working with wool and your yarn breaks, one of the easiest joins you can do is a spit splice. I'm not sure of the science of it, but for a prettier join, intertwine the plies and spit on them. Then rub it firmly between your palms and it will felt together. You can just overlap the yarn ends if you don't care about the look of the join. It holds well enough to keep working and makes for fewer ends to work in.

    • @georgeharrisonfricklas7927
      @georgeharrisonfricklas7927 Год назад +2

      salivary enzymes are extremely useful in pretty much all fiber art, as it helps immensely with the breaking down of the actual molecular bonds in the fiber and bonding them together. salivary activated paints, dyes, and glue (think stamps!) have existed for literally thousands of years.

    • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
      @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Год назад

      I learned in the first metal smithing class I took that saliva is a useful lubricant to use on the saw blade when sawing through a piece of metal. There are commercially available lubricants, too, of course, that are "more hygienic." If the piece is going to be soldered in a gas flame, any germs, whether viral or bacterial, are burned off in that process.

  • @Cruznick06
    @Cruznick06 11 месяцев назад +4

    The fact you started with FLAX for spinning blows me away. I've always been interested in spinning but haven't had the chance to learn the craft yet. I have however done a decent chunk of reading and learning on the topic. Everyone I've met says to try wool first. Then alpaca if you want some challenge. No one ever does flax.
    You've provided vital information into history yet again. Thank you!
    Edit: your coarse thread could be plied into cording for utility uses like binding herbs to dry!

  • @sylvanaire
    @sylvanaire 2 месяца назад +1

    My mother took a trip to New Zealand many years ago and brought back an Ashford Castle wheel. She took some lessons, but she never really pursued it. After she died, I spent some time with an elderly neighbor who knew how to spin & she encouraged me to learn. It seemed silly since I didn’t know how to knit and what would I do with the yarn if I couldn’t knit, so I had to learn both crafts at the same time, lol. I do remember being quite tense, as I was initially learning to spin, and that advice to relax your shoulders? Stellar! The other thing I noticed is, when I first started out, I spun quite a bulky yarn, but as I got more experienced, I got so that I could spin a much finer yarn so that by the time I double plied it, it was a worsted weight yarn. However, I was never able to go back and spin a bulky yarn again! I finally gave it all up when the wheel got out of alignment & wouldn’t spin correctly. I took it to a local spinning guild, and they worked on it, but could never get it to work right again. It was something that I enjoyed & I made a few garments out of the resulting yarn, which was very satisfying. This comment is nine months late, so I have no idea if you kept up with the spinning, but I hope you did.😊

  • @zofiabochenska1240
    @zofiabochenska1240 Год назад +20

    Spinning is such a cool skill. Spinning whorls are found in every archeological site, this is something people were doing for hundreds of years. They were spending long winter days with spindle, and then waving and sawing it together. It gives a very new level of appreciation for their work - how many hours have to go into the simplest garment even, when you have to go through all this process.
    Fun fact, in (older) Polish you can have relative by sword (your father side), or by distaff (mother side). I remember learning what distaff actually is and having this "ohh, I get it now" moment :D

    • @janetmackinnon3411
      @janetmackinnon3411 Год назад +3

      The expressoin 'the distaff side" exists in English too, but I don't think there is an equvalent of 'by the sword'. Thank you!

  • @JustAnotherPerson4U
    @JustAnotherPerson4U Год назад +122

    Wow. Bernadette is taking sustainable fashion to the next level. Making your own thread!
    Next level is learning how to dye it. ❤😉

    • @m.maclellan7147
      @m.maclellan7147 Год назад +21

      Considering some of the mad experiments she has brewed up in her kitchen, I bet dye work (with natural materials!) is next !

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Год назад +5

      @@m.maclellan7147- A good number of recipes still exist.

  • @heatherbonifas1110
    @heatherbonifas1110 11 месяцев назад +4

    As a handspinner, I found this very fun and interesting to watch. Whoever films for you does a wonderful job. Beautifully done.

  • @beterybunny234
    @beterybunny234 11 месяцев назад +3

    Bernadette you have NO idea the joy my heart had when you decided to learn how to spin with flax. It's secretly my wish to grow and eventually weave into my own fabric.

  • @justanotherotaku7081
    @justanotherotaku7081 Год назад +155

    I simply love the way she compared learning a new skill to learning the mannerisms of a pet! It’s such a good comparison!

    • @vogelvrouw
      @vogelvrouw 11 месяцев назад +7

      Especially with a skill like this, you really seem to have learn how to "read" the fiber and thread you're working with

    • @rachaelbao
      @rachaelbao 11 месяцев назад

      I’m a bad piggy parent. I didn’t learn that much about my cavies.

  • @rosemarycousins5501
    @rosemarycousins5501 Год назад +14

    I was taught by an old Savile Row tailor to iron my linen thread after waxing it, it makes a world of difference to how it then handles when subsequently sewing with it, in a good way.

    • @rikuaotsuki6353
      @rikuaotsuki6353 Год назад +3

      Huh, that makes sense for a few reasons.You're resetting the way the fibers want to set within the twist itself, addressing kinks, AND melting the wax to force it to soak in deeper and more evenly.

  • @elihinze3161
    @elihinze3161 11 месяцев назад +1

    Such crazy timing! I was just reading an article on bronze-age spinning (the wheel wasn't introduced until the Middle Ages), and it talks at length about how linen is a difficult material to learn on. Though it wasn't a widely adopted practice, some spinners used 'spinning bowls' filled with water that had a 'handle strap' of sorts in the basin. The fibers would be pulled through the strap, getting wet in the process, and then spun via drop spinning. (There was an older technique called 'supported spinning', but it largely fell out of favor as drop spinning allowed the spinner greater mobility. This is why it was quickly adopted by herders and nomads!)

  • @Darklor_WCF
    @Darklor_WCF 11 месяцев назад +5

    You are such a cool person. You inspired me to rejuvinate my passion for sewing I had when I was a wee lad.
    After watching many of your videos years ago, i have now filled my office with fabric and sewing supplies (some contained in biscuit tins of course) . I have somehow ammassed a collection of 30 sewing machines, mostly pre 1930, including 4 treadle machines and one 1960s industrial singer straight stitch machine.
    My girlfriend loves that I can mend and alter her garments, and I have been getting into designing and making increasingly advanced pieces.
    Now, I am self aware enough to know that a big time youtuber suck as yourself likely will not read a random rambling comment, but to anyone else who may be reading this who is interested in sewing at all: explore it, get a simple hand sewing supplies kit or a used sewing machine and just dive in. It is fun to learn!

  • @michellelaw7550
    @michellelaw7550 Год назад +25

    You did amazingly well, especially as you’ve chosen probably the hardest way to learn to spin. You broke all the rules, not starting with a drop spindle, starting with a second hand antique wheel instead of a modern one and spinning flax straight off. Yet you made some really good thread from day one. I’ve been spinning for about 15 years so I have an idea of what I’m looking at and I’m really impressed by what you have accomplished. Keep spinning, you have a natural affinity for it I think. 😊

  • @tamllinn
    @tamllinn 11 месяцев назад +115

    Bernadette: has been sewing all her life, made a career of it
    Also Bernadette: Wow! It’s thread!!!
    Really, one of the best things about learning a new craft is the sense of new appreciation and wonderment about the most common things.

  • @helloemilymills
    @helloemilymills 11 месяцев назад +2

    I love what you said about the sounds that are lost to time, and how wonderful it is to get a glimpse of some of those sounds today! Wonderful video 💕

  • @cherengland3905
    @cherengland3905 11 месяцев назад +1

    Most areas have spinning groups. They love new blood and they are more than happy to teach you how to spin if that is on a wheel or a drop spindle. They usually have get-togethers once a month or such.

  • @rodneyferris4089
    @rodneyferris4089 Год назад +60

    All I can say with tears in my eyes: Congratulations. You have such a great new skill! Bernadette you bring me so much joy and encouragement! You have rejoiced the heart of an old man! Thank you!

  • @olgavos5318
    @olgavos5318 Год назад +24

    Lovely wheel, great spinning! And excellent advice from JillianEve! What helped me a lot was preparing the flax on the distaff carefully. I always re-hackle a new strick, or comb it with a dog comb. And I separate out the fibres carefully before winding them onto the distaff. Also, making a smaller bouffante on the distaff helps. Advice from a very experienced flax spinner was not to prepare more fibre than you can spin in a day.

  • @oreoandoz7723
    @oreoandoz7723 27 дней назад

    I've been spinning for 40 years. Usually, I knit with the resulting yarns, since it's nearly impossible to spin a yarn as fine as today's industrial yarns used for the clothing industry. I think we often forget that most people wore coarser fabrics necessarily before the mid-19th century because the yarns were thicker - unless you were rich, and had imported fabrics, especially silks. I've spun many exotic fibres - silk, cashmere, angora, even yak. My camel-cashmere blend scarf is the warmest thing I've ever owned, and this blend allowed me to get a reasonably fine yarn! Using garter stitch to knit it up gave me a flat scarf that tucks nicely into the neckline of coats without much bulk. I have a lovely, modern Lendrum wheel, but I've spun on many antique wheels, as well, that our guild owns. Many are worn/warped from long use, or the tensioners are not as sophisticated as modern wheels, so it can be difficult to get your yarn as fine and even as you might like. But they are great for demonstrations. Yes, I think yours is a 19th-century wheel, probably a home spinner in a rural area, because later in the 19th-C due to the industrial revolution machines were producing the fine, even fabrics we are now used to (the Luddite rebellions, for those not "up" on their British history, were a vicious example of factory owners firing all of their skilled, human workers almost overnight in order to replace them with machines - a piece of history that feels eerily reminiscent of the threat AI poses today for the human work force in many other industries).

  • @sampancisco4931
    @sampancisco4931 6 месяцев назад +1

    I have the same jump in the deep end mentality 😅 it usually works out. I'm also glad you started with flax, it may be more challenging but the way you spin flax is very different from wool and unlearning and relearning has often put people off of spinning anything other than wool. Besides excitement will carry you through the hard parts.

  • @juliegiles3044
    @juliegiles3044 Год назад +25

    I remember my Mom spinning wool as a kid. She always made it look so easy haha
    We did start to finish; shearing the sheep all the way to knitting the wool socks.
    Thanks for reminder of fond memories 😊

  • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
    @SharpAssKnittingNeedles Год назад +55

    As an experienced wheel spinner who taught myself on spindles I made myself, wow ❤
    You chose the hardest route possible! Antique wheels can be finnicky af, and every one I've had has had its own personality. And then immediately trying to go fine with tow! Most of us start by making wool rope singles 😂
    Amazing job and the final thread is as lovely as that wheel!

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад +2

      We have a spinning wheel at the historic site where I used to work that would, while you were spinning, would simply go haywire with a certain person who worked there. Oddly enough, the loom didn't like her either.

    • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
      @SharpAssKnittingNeedles Год назад +2

      @@parkerbrown-nesbit1747 The fiber tools know the bad aples 👀 don't let her near the wool combs!

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад +1

      @@SharpAssKnittingNeedles she had problems with those too. I knew something was wrong when our farm cat (who was, to be honest, quite persnikity about people) hissed at her.

    • @SharpAssKnittingNeedles
      @SharpAssKnittingNeedles Год назад

      @@parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Lol my main concern was that they'd act up and stab her! Wool combs are kinda terrifying 🤣

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Год назад +1

      @@SharpAssKnittingNeedles indeed! And they did stab her (I had to leave the shop before I broke out laughing). She was not a nice person at all (she even lied to get the job)).

  • @northwoodfalls1403
    @northwoodfalls1403 11 месяцев назад +6

    Your channel is a treasure. A real gem amongst the cacophony of endless content. Every time I pop in to catch up on what you have been working on, it’s like I’ve entered an oasis where time flows a little slower, where the world is a little calmer and simpler and more satisfying and delightful. My whole body relaxes and my mind feels refreshed and invigorated. Thank you so much for all that you do. I’m not unaware of how much work goes into creating videos like these and of that work I am deeply appreciative. The challenges you take on inspire me to not be afraid of the learning curves inherent in acquiring any new skill set. Also, I can’t help but think that there is a lot of historical significance to your channel and the channels of the other creators in this space. Something as simple as you highlighting the soundscapes that have been lost to us …. It’s not a thing I ever thought about, but I will always consider it in future. It’s important that these skills not be lost to us completely. We never know when we will need to call on them for one thing, but also, rediscovering the old ways can possibly inspire solutions to modern problems. The “fast” everything in our current culture is clearly a large problem for us to tackle. In that vein, your channel feels very important to me.

  • @fabulousfloof3546
    @fabulousfloof3546 2 месяца назад

    On the whole community and family thing; Sewing is something that really brings me and my mum together we come from a line of people involved in sewing, spinning, tailoring and textiles. My grandmother was a fashion artist who painted the images for patterns back in the 50s and 60s, her parents worked in a factory which made sewing machines. That side of my family comes from Leeds, a place that i know has a long history of tailors and clothing design. It's a thread (pun fully intended) that ties me back to that bloodline, and gives me and my mother a shared interest. We enjoy watching these videos together, and she helps me with my sewing projects, it's my favorite way to spend time with her

  • @feed8647
    @feed8647 Год назад +67

    My mom used to learn how to spin and weave, it was very cool seeing her explore such an ancient craft as a hobby. Sadly, nowadays the spinning wheel sits unused, but everstime I see it I remember her joy and pride of learning how to do it, the hours spent reseaching and then telling me about it, her pure exitement over it. Sewing and knitting (and soemday, hopefully spinning and weaving) makes me feel really close to her 😔

    • @RandomAFP
      @RandomAFP 11 месяцев назад +2

      I tried to teach my mother to knit. The experience was... not a joyful one.

    • @elysiana8889
      @elysiana8889 11 месяцев назад +3

      Well you have a reason to pick it up and learn.

  • @MarialenaSarakatsianou
    @MarialenaSarakatsianou Год назад +133

    this is such a great coincidence, a couple days ago I was just randomly thinking about sleeping beauty and the consequences of a kingdom banning spinning wheels (as one does) and how bad that would be for the economy (and the poor spinners ofc) and now it turns out the whole "pricking a finger on a spinning wheel's spindle" doesn't even make sense! (wtf disney?) And then this led me again into that rabbit hole of all these original (and downright terrifying) Grimm fairy tales that I had managed to forget..

    • @Eloraurora
      @Eloraurora Год назад +27

      It could have been a spindle wheel, which does have a pointy bit. Most of the explanations I've seen suggest that a wheel that had been used to spin unwashed wool for years would have some potentially nasty bacteria on that point, and pricking yourself could lead to infection.

    • @lisar9800
      @lisar9800 Год назад +8

      There are severeal versions of Sleeping Beauty, or Dornröschen, as called in the Grimm fairytales. It is also said in many versions that the kingdom became very very poor by the decision of the king, but one was saved by the bad 13th fairy. Also in Frau Holle, the spindel takes an important role, as Marie pricks herself and wants to wash the blood off in a well, so that the thread will not be ruined and money can be earned from it.

    • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
      @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Год назад +1

      I've taken a few metal smithing classes at an arts center/retreat near my town, which offers classes in several disciplines, including fiber. It has a central dining hall for meals, where teachers and students of all the classes mingle and chat. The man who was teaching tapestry weaving the same week that I was there, spoke of spinning and the "misinformation" of how Sleeping Beauty fell into her long sleep. It was his opinion that it was meant to be a lesson on keeping one's hands off of other people's property, and off of what one doesn't understand or hasn't been taught to use safely and effectively. 🤷🏼‍♀️ Could be true(ish).

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 Год назад

      The tale-teller had to curse her somehow, and not in some conventional way (for whatever reason).

    • @MakoKitten
      @MakoKitten Год назад +1

      They had to probably o something, because the original sleeping beauty story is a horror show called The Sun, The Moon, and Talia. She gets a splinter from spinning and falls asleep, and is locked away, but guys come across her and she's so beautiful that they take advantage of her in her sleep and she's only awoken when one of her starving children sucks the splinter out of her.

  • @captainghoul666
    @captainghoul666 9 месяцев назад +1

    Bernadette not only are you starting with an insane fiber you're also doing the equivalent of waiting to make a ballgown as your first sewing project

  • @puddle-brigade
    @puddle-brigade 11 месяцев назад +1

    The fiber arts community in the american midwest is surprisingly good. I’ve been able to find working antique wheels for cheap, made a friend who makes supported spindles, and I’m growing my own patch of fiber flax this summer.

  • @TheFamilyVonPapp
    @TheFamilyVonPapp Год назад +29

    I’m currently teaching myself how to use my great great aunt’s 1904 singer treadle sewing machine. There are days I want to cry because I wish I had an older person to help me with it. It’s crazy to think about how, once upon a time, you not only would have learned to do these sorts of skills from your mother or grandmother but often times on the machine she would have been using for years. The years of experience on a machine that they know intimately would be such an amazing way to learn. So much ancestral knowledge was lost to history with the dawn of the industrial revolution. I love seeing people returning to these skills to help preserve and renew them.

    • @littlepixieme1
      @littlepixieme1 11 месяцев назад

      I also use the treadle machine my great-great grandmother used, and her mother, and her mother back to the 1860s when it was made (patent is 1861). My grandmother and great grandmother did not sew on it, but they kept it to pass down. I'm the first to make anything with it in over 50 years. Its an interesting feeling to be connected and yet not connected at all to your family through heirlooms.

  • @TangentGear
    @TangentGear Год назад +64

    I love Bernadette and her energy and presence but the repeated arrival of Heathcliffe in recent videos is making my heart happy

    • @floranse5205
      @floranse5205 11 месяцев назад +9

      Heathcliffe is so gender like pls I wanna look like them so bad

  • @jontell726
    @jontell726 11 месяцев назад

    Many moons ago, my mom taught us how to make spindles and how to spin and weave.
    Then, I moved to Sweden and visited the Friluftsmuseet in Halmstad and discovered a little cottage with a loom in it.
    We went inside, and an older woman came in, I asked if she knew how to spin as well as weave, since the loom was hers. She said no, but she wanted to learn. So I taught her, and she taught us how to use her big loom. The spindles she had were hundreds of years old, she had found them in the attic of an old barn.
    It was an honor to work with her, and still, to this day, spinning has given me connections to people in the most beautiful of ways.

  • @Nightshade_Realm
    @Nightshade_Realm 5 месяцев назад +1

    When you were talking about the noise the wheel made, all I could imagine was how many children probably fell asleep to the sound of their mother threading something

  • @threadsandpurrs
    @threadsandpurrs Год назад +123

    The spinning wheel does make a very relaxing and satisfying sound. And congratulations on creating usable thread in only a few weeks! I've only used spindles and still struggle to make yarn after a lot more than a few weeks of trial and error. :)

    • @professorrhyyt3689
      @professorrhyyt3689 Год назад +4

      It sounds very much like a cat purring, doesn't it?😺

    • @threadsandpurrs
      @threadsandpurrs Год назад

      @@professorrhyyt3689 it does!! That makes it even better.

  • @edithgruber2125
    @edithgruber2125 Год назад +52

    Oh, I'm excited, a video about traditional spinning. Watching this brings back memories with my grandmother. She owned a spinning wheel which she used to make yarn from raw wool from the sheep she was keeping. I once tried it when I was a little girl but I didn't manage to get an even thread out of it. You could call my produce 'effect wool'. Spinning is an art. For her, it was a form of meditation, for me, it was stressful.
    She passed away in 2008, aged 94, but I still remember her sitting at her spinning wheel, murmuring some prayers under her breath as she spun the woollen yarn on cold winter evenings.
    I'm really impressed that you go for fine threads for starters. I found wool pretty difficult when I was 10 years old. Kudos to your assistant for helping you. They do a great job :)

  • @lauraineblack6572
    @lauraineblack6572 11 месяцев назад

    My MIL was gifted an 1880s English fancy parlor wheel (small upright) made to spin flax and cotton thread. I took it to a spinning class to learn to use it. Teachers reaction was the same. They put me on a wool wheel taught me basics and then spun cotton on my wheel. Just enough to say I did it. My cousin raised sheep and would give me hus wool. Bought a larger wheel spun wool for crochet.
    Parlor wheel sits on display because it is beautiful to look at until I decide to sell it.
    Really enjoyed your video. Brought back fun memories.

  • @theweirdgardener3713
    @theweirdgardener3713 9 месяцев назад

    My mom used to spin her own yarn when I was a little girl and the sound of that spinning wheel brought me back to watching movies while she sat at her little stool. :)