Lazy Kate

Hello!

Before I embark on the story of Lazy Kate, I’d like to share some news with you. As some of you have already guessed from a few subtle clues in my previous post, I’m going to be a grandmother! It takes some getting used to the idea (how did I suddenly get so old?), but I’m thrilled to bits! And very, very happy for the mum-and-dad-to-be.

I’ve hesitated about talking about it here, as I don’t believe in sharing everything online. But I’d have to lead a strange kind of double life to not talk about it here. (Don’t worry, I won’t talk about it all the time.) It just feels good to know that you know, and not to have to be secretive about it anymore.

I also don’t feel very comfortable sharing pictures of loved ones online, but I think it’s okay to show our daughter’s feet here, together with those of the other great love of her life beside her husband.

And I think the girl with the big, hairy white feet doesn’t mind if I share a picture here. She loves going for a walk in the woods, rustling through the autumn leaves just as much as we do.

Neither this sweet-tempered pony nor our daugher is called Kate, and neither of them is lazy. So, who is Lazy Kate?

Well, actually this isn’t about who but about what – it is about a lazy kate (with indefinite article and without capitals). For the non-spinners among you: A lazy kate is a thing that holds yarn bobbins and comes in useful when plying several threads together after having spun them. It comes in different shapes and can be a separate box or rack that is placed beside the spinning wheel or it can be integrated.

This is my spinning wheel – a 21-year-old Louët S10.

I looked up the receipt and saw that I bought it in March 2000 for 515,00 guilders. Guilders, not euros! Goodness, a different era. It is still functioning just as smoothly as when it was new.

It has an integrated lazy kate – the rack with the two filled bobbins beside the treadle in the picture above. This is what it looks like without the bobbins.

With two bobbins I can make a 2-ply yarn, but the problem is that I now want to make a 3-ply yarn. I could hold the third bobbin on my lap, or place it in a basket or box beside the spinning wheel, but it would be much better to have an additional lazy kate.

So I decided to order one, and as the Louët spinning wheel factory is just around the corner from the stables where our daughter’s pony lives, I thought I might as well collect it instead of having it delivered. Do come along!

At the entrance there is a spinning wheel very much like mine, only more colourful.

Louët doesn’t have a factory shop, and it isn’t possible to visit the factory itself right now, but we are allowed to take a look around in their upstairs showroom. My spinning wheel is their very first model.

Since then it has evolved and several other models have been added. From what I understand, it is now even possible to have a spinning wheel put together to your own specifications, with single or double treadle, Scotch or Irish tension, etcetera.

The factory also produces all kinds of tools for fibre preparation, like combs, small and large hand carders, and drum carders.

On a shelf there is a niddy noddy, used for making skeins, and some fun hand spun yarns.

What I didn’t know, is that they also make weaving looms. Here is the very smallest and simplest one.

And here is one of the larger and more elaborate looms.

I don’t know anything about weaving, but just looking at the fabrics in progress on the looms is enjoyable, too.

Well, it’s time to collect my lazy kate and the block needed to attach it to my spinning wheel. I hope you’ve enjoyed this little virtual outing. I’ll tell you more about the yarn I’m spinning when there is more to show.

If you’d like more in-depth information about these spinning wheels or looms, please visit the Louët website. And if you’d like some chat about I-don’t-know-what-exactly-yet, please visit me again next week 😉. Bye!

8 thoughts on “Lazy Kate”

  1. Congratulations mormor! Swedish distinguishes between maternal and paternal grandmother. Quite practical, by the way.

    I can see why it makes you feel old, but on the other hand – what a blessing to become a grandmother while still young enough to feel old!

    • Thank you, it really feels like a blessing! I wish we had that distinction. Here both are called oma, which can be confusing.

  2. I too love that Swedish builds in the distinctions between maternal and paternal grandparents (although “farmor” sounds like “farmer” to anglophones, so always a bit confusing). So, congratulations, mormor-to-be!

    How fortunate to live so close to Louët! Until I saw those beautiful tools, I had never been tempted to learn spinning. Now, either the blond woods or that painted wheel would definitely inspire me. Thank you for taking us on the virtual tour.

    One last topic, or rather question: what breed of pony is that charmer?

    • Spinning is such a relaxing thing to do (once you get the hang of it) – highly recommended! Thanks for your good wishes, I’m really liking the sound of mormor-to-be. And our daughter’s big-footed friend is a mixed breed: Gypsy cob and Highland pony.

  3. I love the visit with the feet! And congratulations for good family stuff!
    Fascinating to see all the spinning wheels and tools. I love seeing how things are made, the gear, the names….niddy noddy?? There is a story there. I always wonder how the names came to be.

  4. Congratulations!! I recently became a grandmother myself, it is a wonderful experience. And you will have so many more things to knit!

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