this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2023
397 points (98.8% liked)
Knitting
1994 readers
1 users here now
A place to show off your knitting, ask questions, and generally enable each other!
CURRENT THEME
๐งถ CABLES ๐งถ
LAST WINNER
RULES
-
All instance rules apply: see legal.lemmy.world
-
WIP/FO Posts should include pattern details (at least name, preferably link)
-
Relevant self-promo from community members is acceptable but will be handled on a case-by-case basis. Exclusively salesy posts will be removed. (more info)
UPCOMING THEMES
TBA!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I saw a woman spin yarn using her dogs sheds.
Don't ask me about spidle spinning my Maine Coons hair. ;)
I will absolutely ask about it! Haha. Do they shed a lot? The cats I've had have all been decently short haired, so no fibres you could really work with.
Here's the video by the way.
Our Maine Coon came as a rescued "present" by the local police, who did not know what to do with her. So I was not at all prepared for a long-furred creature.
Summers here are really hot, but her hair is so long and wooly that it felts in place before it can work its way out. In the first year, I had to cut her hair with a mower. ;)
The second year, I was prepared and started combing her. She enjoys it, and I get a lot of harvested hair that way. Sometimes in winter I pull out my tiny 16g top spindle and spin a bit of it. You can't go too fine, or the thread will unravel. For sturdy and fluffy, I recommend spinning around a thread of sewing yarn or mixing in some crimpy wool fiber.
When we used to have a super sheddy dog, I always told my wife she should spin yarn out of the dog hair and then knit a sweater for the dog, but she wouldn't do it.