Posts tagged ‘fibres’

Spinning Yarn

In my dream house/farm, I’m going to have sheep and other animals that have been rescued from farms that aren’t very nice to their animals. I want to give them happy homes!

It’s my understanding that you want to shear sheep though, even if they are just pets, because in sub-tropical Queensland especially, it’s just too hot in summer for all that wool. That makes sense – we have to shave poor Loodle in summer cos it’s too hot for him too!

So if I’m going to have this abundance of wool, I think I’m going to learn how to spin my own yarn. I’ve been interested in it for a while, but I read this post on Living Naturally in Louisiana and it inspired me! I’m too busy at the moment to try on a handspindle, and our place is too small to have a spinning wheel, so it will have to wait, but I’m anticipatorily excited! (Yes, I know anticipatorily is not a word, but it gets my point across. Why should Shakespeare be the only one who is allowed to make up words that aren’t nouns?)

yarn and spinning wheel

Homespun yarn with a beautiful spinning wheel. The yarn always seems to be intensely coloured when it's homespun. Photo courtesy of Screw Bronze! blog (link at the end of the post).

I love the idea of having local, eco-friendly yarn though – from happy sheep. I don’t buy wool yarn now because I don’t want to support an industry that isn’t animal-friendly, but I’m not happy buying acrylics either (they’re made from petrochemicals), cottons use so much water and maize takes corn out of the food web. That pretty much leaves me with bamboo and soy (leftovers from making soy products), which are both pretty expensive and often not locally produced. Sometimes I pick up used yarn, unravel a jumper or succumb to some pretty cotton, but I can’t wait til I can make my own pretty yarn from my happy pet sheep. Then I can reduce my dependence on those other kinds of yarn (although if I start making my own soy milk, I wonder if I could make my own soy yarn… and maybe grow some hemp and make a blended fibre…)

Plus I’ll be able to try some of those felting patterns I’ve seen (only animal fibre can be felted).

*Photo courtesy of this post at Screw Bronze!

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March 4, 2010 at 12:40 pm Leave a comment

Reduce: Tissues vs Hankies

What has the greater environmental impact, tissues or handkerchiefs? This is a question that’s been niggling inside my mind for some time, ever since I found out that Naturale were no longer producing recycled tissues, leaving Australia with no recycled facial tissues on the market. (I emailed them to be sure – they’ve definitely stopped.)

This post on Super Eco got me thinking about it again. Can I best minimise my impact on the environment by reducing my use of tissues and changing over to handkerchiefs?

I thought I’d weight up the pros and cons:

  • Tissues are made of paper, the production of which involves chopping down trees. This action releases lots of carbon into the atmosphere, and also removes the forests that are the carbon sinks of our world.
  • Tissue production, like all paper production, includes the use of lots of water.
  • Tissues are disposable, so more trees are cut down for every single tissue you use.
  • Tissues come packaged in cardboard (the ubiquitous tissue box), which involves the destruction of more forestry as they’re manufactured.
  • As you are constantly throwing them away, you need to buy more and more tissues. This involves transport costs as the tissues are shipped to the stores, and then from the store to your house. It all works something like food miles.
  • The tissues you throw away don’t get recycled, they enter landfill – and we all know landfill is bad, bad, bad!

Seems pretty simple, doesn’t it. All that stuff that’s bad about tissues must be prevented by hankies… right? Hmm.

  • Hankies are made with fabric, usually cotton, which is one of the most water-intensive crops to grow.
  • The harvest of cotton is also an environmental hazard.
  • Cotton needs loads of pesticides, and as well as the environmental impact of the pesticides, there’s the impact of the planes that dump the pesticides.
  • Hankies have to be washed, which uses more water still.

So now you see my trouble, although listing it all out like that does seem to point in a particular direction.

Go hankies!

Everyone else on the net seems to also back this theory up. Don’t ask me why it never occurred to me to Google this before. Yeah, I said shuddup. Yes, Jho… you. :P

Here are some great reads about why hankies are the winners over tissues:

Now I just have to get me some hankies! I’d like to make some, but I’ll have to get second hand fabric, or I’ll end up buying more material than I need. I wonder if flannel hankies would be even softer, for when you’ve got a cold? They sell large bags of flannel off-cuts for $6 each at Bunnings. But aside from flannel, where will I get some pretty second-hand fabric?

On a non-environmental note, I find it weird that I feel the hankies need to be pretty and girly. I wouldn’t call myself butch, certainly, but I’m not on the femme side of the lady spectrum. I wouldn’t wear floral or pink if you paid me (ok, maybe if you paid me). I don’t shave my legs or even own make-up. I like little pretty things though, they make me feel good, and girly in secret. My cloth pantyliners, the liner of my cargo pants and work trousers, Yankee Elv’s home-made earrings all have that effect. Anyway, pretty second-hand fabric must be available – my cloth pantyliners are very pretty, and Laura over at Amy’s Rag Bag only uses second-hand cloth.

 

Cloth panyliners from Amy's Rag Bag

Cloth panyliners from Amy's Rag Bag

 

 

Suggestions people? And does anyone have a hankie pattern? I don’t know if I can manage a hemmed square all by myself. ;)

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January 27, 2009 at 12:04 am 7 comments


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