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Dutch Hollow Acres

  (Avon, New York)
Diversify Your Portfolio
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Fiber Market Monday

It's Monday and that means our virtual fiber market is now open!  Come post your links to your local harvest store, farms store, etsy etc. Connect with fiber shoppers!

To buy or sell fiber products please go to http://www.alpacabytes.com/?p=318

 
 

Fiber Market Monday

FMM is back!  Get more visitors to your local harvest fiber store by listing it for free at Fiber Market Monday's. 

Just dye a new batch of roving or yarn?  Show it off! 

Proud of your fiber animal and want to show them off?  Post them too!

To enter your link and view others Visit AlpacaBytes.com

 
 

How To Make Felted Soap

Felting soap is a great activity for both adults and kids.  For detailed instructions and photos on how to felt soap please visit our blog at

http://www.alpacabytes.com/?p=205

We have many other fiber projects there too!

 
 

Fiber Market Monday!

Visit our blog and add your link to our Fiber Market Monday!   This is our version of a Fiber Farmer's Market.

Show us your raw fiber, milled fiber, handmade products, fiber livestock, studs and more! 

Links are free to post until 11:59pm on 7/21/09

All that we ask is that you please link back to our website to help promote the free fiber market atmosphere. 

Enjoy!

--Lindsay
Dutch Hollow Acres
Alpaca Bytes

 
 

Washing Alpaca Fiber

The biggest concern with novice fiber workers is accidentally felting the beautiful fleece they just got. Not to worry, washing fiber isn’t as scary as it sounds. You just need to remember one thing. DO NOT AGITATE. To felt fiber you need 3 things, hot water, soap and agitation. If you neglect to agitate you won’t felt!

Here’s how I wash my fiber.

1.  Skirt 1 pound of fiber you plan on washing. Get rid of poop and large vegetable mater
2.  Loosely put ¼ of a pound into a lingerie bag 15”x18” – If you stuff it in the bag the center of the fiber won’t get clean. Repeat for 3 other bags.
Alpaca Fiber In Bags
3.  Fill up your washing machine with HOT water.
4.  Once the machine is full add in 1 cup of Dawn Original Dish Soap. Stir the water to evenly mix in the soap but not so hard it makes suds. TURN OFF YOUR WASHER!!!

5.  Place a bag into the water, use tongs to push the bag under 2-3 times until you see/feel the fiber loosen up in the bag and it is fully soaked. Repeat with your other 3 bags.

6.  Yup, the water is already dirty, ewww. Make sure your washer is OFF and close the lid. Let your fiber soak for 30 minutes.

7.  Remove the bags and let the water drain from them and set aside. Turn on your washer and have it drain the water out.
8.  Fill your washer with WARM water this time and NO soap. TURN OFF WASHER when full.
9.  Put in your first fiber bag into the warm water. I use my hands this time to submerge the bag and fluff up the fiber in it until it’s loose in the bag. Repeat for the 3 remaining bags
10.  Let sit for 30 minutes
11.  Repeat steps 7-9 until the rinse water is clear after 30 minutes.
12.  When your rinse water is finally clear, remove the bags and let drain for the last time. Turn on the washer and drain the water again.
13.  Place bags evenly in the empty washer.
14.  Put your washer on the SPIN cycle and turn on so it will squeeze the rest of the water out of your fiber.

Drying Your Washed Fiber:

There are several ways to dry your fiber. It all depends on what you have available to you. I’ve seen some folks lay the fiber out on a chair on their deck and let Mother Nature do her work. Sweater racks also work well.

I accidentally found a great way for me to dry my fiber when Mother Nature wasn’t cooperating. Rain and high humidity makes for slow fiber drying. So I laid out my fiber on an old coffee table covered in towels in my basement. I don’t have a sweater rack have plenty of cookie racks so I used those to get a little lift so air could flow under the fiber. I placed the table next to the dehumidifier and by the next morning it was dry!

 
 

Warping a Mini Card Loom (Part 1)

Card weaving is really fun, easy and portable.  Depending on the design you are doing the work can move very quickly.  The hardest part about card weaving is warping your loom.  Here is a short video I’ve made on how to warp the Palmer Loom I use for many of my projects.

In this video I’m using all one color because the end product is for the show halter I’m working on.  In future series I will be using multiple colors to show you how you can make designs and patters in your weave. 

Palmer Looms

 
 

Alpaca Fiber CSA - update

Alpaca Fiber CSA

Welcome all yarn fanatics! If you like to knit, crochet, braid, ply-split, etc, this CSA is for you!

CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture. Our fiber CSA allows you to own a share of our alpaca herd and receive yarn from our heard as if you owned the alpacas yourself. You really didn’t want to clean up alpacas beans anyway, right?

What does a share of Alpaca Fiber CSA get you?

- CSA share holder’s certificate
- Monthly Farm Newsletter
- Finished Alpaca Yarn!
- # of skeins and colors vary depending on our final shearing

What do we spend shareholder fees on?

- Feed/Hay/Minerals
- Veterinary fees
- Fencing and other barn maintenance
- Shearing fees
- Fiber processing fees
- Shipping/handling

Yarn will be mailed out to you as soon as we receive the processed yarn from the mill. Milling times do vary and we will keep you updated in our newsletters as to when we expect shipment from the mill.

CSA shares cost $200. You’re welcome to purchase more than one share to double, triple, etc your take of the harvest. We currently limit our shares to 20 to insure everyone gets a fair amount yarn.

Share holders are encouraged to visit our farm and see what we’re all about. Please contact us to set up a farm visit!

To Purchase a CSA Share Click Here - You will be taken to our Etsy Store.

=========================================================
UPDATE: We currently have black roving available for our CSA share customers.  2009's shearing is headed to the mill tomorrow to be processed into yarn.  This year's yarn will be processed into an alpaca/wool/nylon blend perfect for socks, mittens, sweaters, and other items that take abuse.  The wool give the yarn memory while the nylon gives it added strength.
=========================================================

Tablet Weaving - Alpaca

Click Here for our Official Blog 

I’ve always enjoyed braiding and have made many items out of alpaca by spinning the yarn into cord and then using different types of braids to make rope, leads, collars, reins, etc.  What I love about braiding is the speed.  In about an hour I can have a finished product.  The drawback is the ability to have patterns. I’m confined to solid colors, a random color insertion or stripes.

Always thinking about other ways to use my alpaca I came across tablet weaving.  The tablet weave has been around for 100’s of years and is the basic form of weaving.  You can use any type of fiber like, silk, cotton, wool and yes alpaca.  What I like about tablet weaving is the ability to insert patterns and more colors into your work that braiding can’t do.  I’m currently learning how to make a simple checker pattern as you can see from the photos. 

Tablet weaving is a slower process.  With the pattern I’m currently working on the most time consuming part constantly having to untie and take out the twist that forms in the tail.  I think I’ll be working on a better board with some swivels that will take out the twist as I weave.  Other patterns involve a forward and back movement of the cards so a twist never builds up making the weave faster.

To learn more about tablet weaving here are the 2 sites where I learned the most.

http://www.stringpage.com/tw/basictw.html
http://www.lindahendrickson.com/

  

 
 

Poor Man's Skirting Table

CLICK HERE FOR OUR OFFICIAL BLOG

I spent Sunday afternoon skirting alpaca fiber.  Like the majority of new alpaca owners I’m broke after purchasing my foundation herd.  I feel like the blue collar redneck alpaca owner sometimes but honestly, I wouldn’t trade this lifestyle for anything.  It is hard work but very satisfying.

So what is skirting fiber you ask? Once the animal is sheared and the prime, 2nd and 3rd cuts are sorted in their baggies the hard work actually begins.  Each fleece has to be laid out and picked through to remove any short cuts and vegetation before it’s ready to send to the mill for processing.  A skirting table is what you lay the fiber out on.  This special table has holes in it so when you shake the fiber dirt, debris, and short cuts fall through while the fleece rests on top.  They even make fiber tumbling drums which rotate and toss the fiber around and let the crud fall through to the floor.  Tables or tumbles usually cost between $2-400.  That’s $ I don’t have laying around at the moment.

I’ve got 36 lbs of fiber to skirt and no table which is a problem.  So I started digging around the barn trying to think of what I could do to put together something at 0 cost to me. 

The solution?
- (2) 4×4 approx 5 feet long
- Chicken wire 24” x 5’
 -  Some staples 

Tada, I give you poor man’s skirting table!  I was afraid the chicken wire would catch the fiber but it didn’t, the fiber rested on tope nicely.  The hole size in the wire was good too an anything shorter than 1.5 inches fell through.  I was surprised to see the amount of dirt and dust that fell out of the fiber. 

I’m happy with my little skirting table until I can afford to build a better one. So far I’ve managed to skirt all the prime fiber and will start on the 2nds next weekend.

Here’s a photo of my “table.”  I apologize for the photo quality, it was taken with my cell phone.

 
 

Alpaca Fraud!!! Arrest made

News article about the alpaca blue jeans project.

Arrests made in connection with the alpaca fiber scam.

For more information read this article. http://www.kansas.com/news/story/793458.html

If anyone has invested in http://www.americanalpacafiberfederation.com/ you really should read this article.

 

 
 
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