What do you spin Cotton on?

By Amelia © March 18, 2026

I started spinning cotton on a Tahkli so I could spin cashmere — and quickly discovered two truths: cashmere is easier to spin than cotton, and I was hooked on cotton. I then mastered cotton on a charkha. But I had a friend who spun lovely cotton on her wheel, so I wanted to learn that. When I finally showed her a skein, she laughed: “Why did you bother with your wheel? You have a charkha — that’s the right tool for the job.”

I sometimes joke that spinning cotton is my tiny penance for Britain’s role in India’s history. Inspired by that, I watched a video of women assembling charkhas and demonstrating their amazing skill in producing Khadi cloth. I had my father and a friend build a similar charkha. My dream is a stage performance: assembling it, then spinning as the lights fade to black. It connects me to tradition, to my dad, and to the joy of cotton spinning — and I’m still chasing their slick no-stop wind-on — one day, I hope to catch it.

The Tahkli is the perfect spindle for cotton - its thin steel shaft gets great speed from a flick, and the weight of the disk keeps it spinning a long time. I usually carve the hook off my Tahklis so it's just a point - sometimes you can buy them that way. The hook just gets in my way, as I am not going to use the Tahkli suspended at all. It also forced me to learn long draw, as you twirl the spindle with one hand and draft with the other. It took a while! I spent evenings during a long hotel stay playing with the tahkli and various types of cotton. The one that clicked was the cotton/recycled blue jean blend. I was so thrilled to finally master this skill!

Then I moved on to a book charka - I loved the silliness of the book shape and had visions of tromp l'oeil painting it to look like some book - but what one? So it is still unpainted. My first one was from India, it was so much fun getting an international package! But it was fiddly, so I graduated to a Bosworth book charka - sweet! Reaching further I tried a Bosworth attache charka - but found it was so fast, I was overwhelmed. So I happily spin on my book charkas now. I did eventually get an improved book charka from e-trade industries in Inda - it is really much improved over the basic Indian book charka, though a step away from the quality of the Bosworth charkas.

But as I mentioned earlier, I felt I had to master cotton on the wheel. It was not as much fun as the Tahkli or charka, so when my friend made her comment, it gave me permission to return to those tools. I hold onto plans to spin naturally colored cotton for a hand towel kit I have, and plop the charka quill straight into the shuttle I have that fits it. We will see how I like that - usually I spin with end-feed shuttles.

What makes a charka so good for cotton? Speed. It is very easy with your hand turning the wheel to get up to speeds hard to achieve on a treadle wheel. E-spinners can keep up, though you may want a quill on your e-spinner to avoid the drag of tension on the cotton. I learned cotton well before e-spinners entered my life, though, and have not spent much time playing on my e-spinner with cotton. It's just such a delight to pull out my charka, so that's my go-to cotton tool, with a Tahkli tucked away for on-the-move cotton spinning.

What do you spin cotton on? Or, what has kept you from trying out cotton?

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© March 18, 2026 by Ask The Bellwether, posted at http://askthebellwether.com/

Spinners Alphabet: What Begins With C?

By Amelia © March 9, 2026

C

is for Cable, that crazy often tightly spun yarn where you overply a 2-ply. then ply it back on itself in what I like to call a cable ply, to bring it back into balance. So it's four strands and very tough. Then there's Chain Ply, a 3-ply construction made by making loops as you ply a single strand, like crochet chains. And Crepe yarn structure is like a hemi-cable, you "cable ply" an s-spun single against an overplied 2-ply.

For a great way to study yarn structures, see Sarah Anderson's Yarn Design for Handspinners (Amazon affiliate link - I may get a bit if you use this link). I carry the deck from the book around with me when I need to shake up my spinning and try new things. 80 different yarn structures, and then consider the impact of yarn diameter and color on them!

Fun fact: from the same single, the 3-ply and cable will have very similar WPIs. The cable will be more dense, making a great heel yarn for socks made from the 3-ply. A student gave me this nugget, and I've used it several times since. It works!

Other fun C's: combing and carding: combing is a worsted prep, carding is a woolen prep; crimp - the curvy wave in individual fibers, which can help you decide how thick or thin to spin it; and that leads me to Cormo, that lovely crimpy fine wool with a cotton-like feel - yum!

Do you have a fun fiber C to add to this? tell us all about it in the comments...

Postscript: I plan to post these every other week moving forward, more or less, making 2026 the year of the spinner's alphabet. This spinner's, anyway!

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© March 9, 2026 by Ask The Bellwether, posted at http://askthebellwether.com/

How can I get more on my spindle?

A well-organized wood pile

By Amelia © March 2, 2026; originally written October 9, 2012

Preface (in 2026): I have been blogging again, did you notice? and in reviewing the blog's back stage I found many unpublished drafts. This is one. It is a topic I have written about on the blog over the years, but this gives yet another view on the topic. And now on to the Amelia of 2012...

Getting more yarn on your spindle requires great skill. Luckily, it is a skill we all possess: recognize natural beauty. A balanced spindle-full of yarn looks nice. It's naturally appealing in its tidiness, order, and symmetry.

Okay, I hear some of you groaning. You didn't like to tidy your room, and you still don't like housecleaning. But this isn't that. It's winding yarn on the spindle, which is a celebration. Each time you wind on, you have created a new length of yarn.

For the past year, I have lived with wood stove heat. I like being warm, so I chop wood. I have a choice I can make -- I can throw the wood in an untidy pile that falls and expands when new wood hits it,or I can stack the wood in an organized wall that leans on itself and stays put. The organized pile looks better. Beauty of the woodpile translates to compactness, keeping more wood dry, and giving easy access to wood. With summer arriving July 5th here, we've worked through several cords of alder this spring, all chopped by me. I feel quite accomplished, taking my messy piles and putting them neatly inthe woodpile for use in keeping my family warm.

A messy wood pile
Similarly, as I work through a spinning project like the merino/yak/silk blend I spun up at Black Sheep Gathering, I feel quite accomplished as I get 1 ounce, 1.5 ounces, and then the full 2 ounces on my top-whorl spindle with no appreciable wobble.

How far can you take this? The most I've put on a spindle is 4 ounces of singles (picture in this post) and 4 ounces of plied yarn. I've seen flickr entries with 7 ounces of singles on a spindle, and Andean womens' spindles seem quite a bit fuller than my 4-ouncers.

Practical advice to achieve beauty in your spindle-full:

Wind on tightly, maintaining tension between the newly formed yarn andthe yarn already on the spindle shaft. If you wind on in a closely arranged series of rounds on the shaft, every once in a while switch over to an X-wind on to hold down the rounds and keep the rows from collapsing into each other. You can look for artistry in your cop like the Turkish spindle windings that appear on flickr, or you can strive for a balanced shape and surface of the yarn on the spindle without laying bands of color on the spindle shaft.

I like to put 2 ounces on spindles as singles, and then ply two of them together into a 4-ounce spindle-full. If I'm spinning thinner, I mayput less on the spindle. Consider the final spindle weight. I spin fine yarn on a 1/2-ounce spindle, and I don't want it to get much over an ounce in total weight, so I only put 1/2 ounce on it. I spin thicker yarns (DK singles and thicker) on a 1.5-ounce spindle; after there's an ounce on it, it's 2.5 ounces, which starts to feel heavy. At 3.5 ounces it's heavy enough that I'm done, even if the spindle isn't wobbling.

You may be able to tolerate a heavier spindle - or you may want to stop at a lighter final weight. It's a matter of preference, part ofyour spinning personality.

Plying goes so quickly that I don't mind doubling two 2-ounce spindle-fulls of singles and piling on 4 ounces of plied yarn. It's satisfying to see how closely I can match the length of each half of the fiber, a bit like trying to see how few blows it takes to chop around into burnable logs for my woodstove. And it's really satisfyingto see that huge cop of yarn on the spindle!

(returning to 2026...) I have to say, all of this rings true, except I'm no longer chopping wood for a woodstove. It was a really good workout!

For more on this topic, and pictures describing much of what was described above related to spindle wind-ons, see these posts:

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© March 2, 2026 by Ask The Bellwether, posted at http://askthebellwether.com/blog

Spinner's Alphabet: What Begins With B?

By Amelia © February 23, 2026

B

is for the Bee that is always in each Betty Roberts spinning wheel. It took me a while to find mine, but it was there. Schacht put a ladybug pin on each Ladybug spinning wheel, in a different place. Those were fun to find also!

Betty Roberts Wheels were made in Washington by Betty. She has since retired though it's my understanding that she did train an apprentice. They were lovely wheels with solid builds. Mine was a castle wheel, so somewhat transportable, but it did have significant weight.

Independent wheel (spindle, charka, e-spinner) makers are treasures that we should celebrate. I do still have a Watson Martha wheel in my flock, made by Watson Sr. in Sidney, Canada, and I have a Pocket Wheel made by Doug Dodd's apprentice and now the official maker, Jon McCoy. I had had a Dodd original (#7) but decided to go with the newer improved engineer McCoy put into the wheel. That's a lovely portable wheel!

Other fun B's: Spinolution Bee, Bison fiber, Balanced yarn, Boucle

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© February 23, 2026 by Ask The Bellwether, posted at http://askthebellwether.com/

Spinner's Alphabet: A

By Amelia © February 16, 2026

Follow along with me while I explore the A to Z of spinning. Today marks the letter A, a great place to start.

A

is for Angora - angora rabbits have lovely angora fiber (so warm!). Angora was one of the first three fibers I learned with. I had Romney, Mohair, and Angora. Angora was definitely the hardest of the three. It is a very fine fiber, very slippery, and this particular one was fairly short staple to very challenging for a beginner indeed. I managed a few yards - enough for two rounds in the hat I made from my first yarn. And when I wear that hat, I feel the warmth of the angora. It is a hollow fiber, which contributes to how warm it is.

Now that I've been a spinner for decades, I know that even 10% angora in a blend is enough to add its warmth and let me feel its amazing softness. It is delightful blended with merino. One of the most amazing blends I've spun was angora, bleached yak, and cashmere - that spun into such a delightfully fine single that I made a 4-ply to bring it back to a sport-to-DK-weight yarn. Lovely, lovely blend. The fibers all contribute to its lovely halo. I have not yet come across a pattern worthy of the yarn, but perhaps a nice shawlette as there is only an ounce of it.

There are several varieties of Angora rabbits. English and French Angoras have lovely natural color but can have shorter staple. German Angoras are white, but have lovely long staple. Then there are Jersey Woolys, which are small rabbits with Angora fiber. I tend to find the nicest fiber at wool shows from the rabbit wranglers themselves, though you can also find white Angora combed top commercially. From the shepherd it is usually still in a cloud or occasionally a batt. Avoid compressing this or storing it in plastic, as it will matt and felt if not given room to breathe and a dry environment.

Other fun A's:

Art yarn - the county fair judge often says, that it is architecture, planning, and follow-through that define an art yarn

Angora goats - their fiber is called Mohair, confusing, I know! and is quite different from Angora fiber from rabbits.

I invite you to add more A's in the comments - just list your A-word-related-to-spinning or give a little bit more about it. Perhaps take this up on your own blog and post a link to it in the comments. All are welcome.

If you want to see other posts on this blog about angora, check out these: Angora posts - note some will be about Angora goats and Mohair fiber.

Be sure to check back in a week or two for B!

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© February 16, 2026 by Ask The Bellwether, posted at http://askthebellwether.com/