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The length and quality of the fiber in a knitting yarn determines its texture, luster, strength and hand. Knitting yarn made from long fibers will pill less, be smoother, stronger, more lustrous and more elastic. Knitting Yarns containing a mixture of fiber lengths are softer, fuzzier and less strong. Tightly twisted knitting yarns display the texture of a knitted pattern to its best advantage. Animal yarns:
Wool
yarn comes
from a domesticated sheep. Wool accepts dye well, is flame-retardant by
nature, remains warm even when wet, sheds water better than other yarns.
Natural wool should be hand-washed. 'Superwash' wool has been treated to
allow machine washing. Wool will usually resume its proper shape when
washed correctly; if it is mistreated and washed in too-hot water, it
will shrink or felt.
Mohair
yarn comes from an Angora goat. Mohair
is durable, sheds dirt, dyes well and does not felt easily. Despite its
hardiness, it is usually spun into knitting yarn used for fluffy garments and
scarves. This knitting yarn is abraded, roughing its fibers to create that 'fuzzy'
look.
Angora
yarn comes from rabbits. Fabric made
from this yarn is inelastic (no stretch), very fluffy, soft and warm.
Silk is the yarn produced by silk moths.
Silk knitting yarn is made from damaged silk cocoons and broken fibers.
'Raw' silk still has the original moth secretions in it. 'Tussah,' silk
obtained from wild moths is brown. The food fed to domesticated moths
determines their silk's natural color; this can white, green or yellow.
Silk retains heat, absorbs moisture, pills less than wool, is very
strong and very stable when knit, neither shrinking or stretching. |
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