Unwieldy Things to Give Away

Peter Rukavina

I’m down to the last few things to find new homes for in Catherine’s studio, the large, unwieldy things that don’t have a self-evident destination.

Maybe the destination is you? I’ll happily give any of the following away to anyone who will provide a good home.

Please let me know. Local pickup in Charlottetown only.

Walking Spinning Wheel TAKEN

This is giant (the wheel itself has a diameter of 4 feet) spinning wheel, also know as a great wheel.

The great wheel was one of the earlier types of spinning wheel. The fibre is held in the left hand and the wheel slowly turned with the right. This wheel is thus good for using the long-draw spinning technique, which requires only one active hand most of the time, thus freeing a hand to turn the wheel. The great wheel is usually used to spin short-staple fibres (this includes both cotton and wool), and can only be used with fibre preparations that are suited to long-draw spinning

It’s not feature-complete — the smaller fiddly bits are missing — but in the right hands it could spin again. Or make an addition to your collection of Canadiana.

\Photo of a Walking Wheel in a beige room.

Yarn Winder TAKEN

Whenever I didn’t know what a particular piece of her fibre equipment was called, I’d call it a “niddy noddy.” Which is an actual piece of equipment. This is not a niddy noddy, it’s a wooden yarn winder. It winds yarn. One of the “arms” is coming unglued and needs some repair, but it turns well.

Photo of an antique wooden yarn winder.

Wooden Stands TAKEN

Catherine used these looping or wrapping or hanging or some such fibre gymnastics. If you’re in the market for some flexible things that might become room-dividers, these might be for you.

Photo of two wooden stands.

Tapestry Loom

From Catherine’s mother: “the tapestry frame can be used for embroidery or any needle work to stretch the fabric and then work on.”

Photo of what I think is a tapestry loom.

Boot Jack TAKEN

From Catherine’s mother:

The two loops at the end is a boot jack. It used to be on our mud room. Hold the big hoop up right and use the bottom loop to pull your boots off. No messy fingers.

Photo of two interlocking wooden hoops.

Comments

Submitted by Danielle White on

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Hi Peter,

I’m a friend of Lori’s and BJ’s and was fortunate enough to meet Catherine briefly last summer when BJ brought her out on a sunny drive to visit us. I am a fellow fibre fiend and she and I hit it right off. I would be delighted to take the folding rack/divider thingies to use in my studio, if they’re still available. I’m not sure they’ll fit in my car as-is (but my hatchback is quite magical so maybe?) but perhaps we can chat via email and figure out a plan? Cheers. (And thank you for this.)

Submitted by Lyette Sansoucy on

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Bonjour Peter, i would love the boot rack if still available
And i could let the spinners and weavers guild about the big spinning wheel and the tapestry loom...?

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Photo of Peter RukavinaI am . I am a writer, letterpress printer, and a curious person.

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