Introducing our Autumn 2016 batch of Zwartbles and Zwartbles blend yarns:

Zwartbles sheep originate from the Netherlands where they’re an uncommon breed.  They were developed as a multipurpose breed and are valued here in Britain for their calm manner and as lovely mothers with good growing lambs.  Their fleece is dense and bouncy and a very deep dark brown colour, although with age and sun it bleaches rusty red at the tips.  The 2016 fleeces we sourced from Hedgefield Zwartbles (link) are from shearling fleeces, from lambs in their first winter, and consequently the wool is less rustic than is typical and retains the very dark, almost black, colour – we like to think of it as Bitter Chocolate!   As well as pure Zwartbles wool we have developed three blends.  The first is a lovely rustic heathery Coal Grey with the addition of 45% Cheviot wool (from Drumsmittal Farm (link)).  Secondly we have added 50% mohair (from a farm near our mill, The Border Mill (link), in the Scottish Borders) – this blend is a Steel Grey colour, has a real sheen and a soft yet strong handle. The final blend is with 50% alpaca (again sourced close to The Border Mill (link) in the Scottish Borders) – the alpaca fleece used was fawn coloured and the resulting fibre is a beautiful warm Toffee Fudge colour in a soft, squishy yarn.

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Pure Zwartbles – Bitter Chocolate
Zwartbles Cheviot Blend – Coal Grey
Zwartbles Mohair Blend – Steel Grey
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Zwartbles Alpaca Blend – Toffee Fudge
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Zwartbles Cheviot, Zwartbles Alpaca, Zwartbles Mohair and Pure Zwartbles

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I have been keen to try both Shilasdair’s naturally dyed yarns and Chopped Ginger Wool Project single farm Gotland for a while now.  When Helen Stewart released her Hill Top Shawl in the spring I thought it would be the perfect pattern for combining these two quite different yarns.  The pattern was straightforward to knit and I liked Helen’s percentage system – at the end of each row you know how far through the whole project you are……I guess it could be demoralising but I liked it!

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tansy-hilltop-shawl  hilltop-shawl-on-monterey-pine hilltop-shawl-in-gotland hilltop-shawl-by-curious-handmade grellow-tansy-yellow-and-undyed-grey gotland-shawl-drape

The Shilasdair DK in naturally dyed Tansy Gold (dyed with tansy unsurprisingly!) is soft, plump and light (a luxurious mix of alpaca, camel, angora and lambswool) while the Chopped Ginger Gotland Fingering is a much more lean and heavy yarn (in a natural undyed dark grey).  Both yarns were lovely to knit with in different ways – the Gotland has lots of character but did require some concentration at times. I absolutely love my finished shawl and am sure I’ll have many happy years wearing it.

Full project notes can be found here on Ravelry

 

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