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wovember.wordpress.com...
Combing as a fibre preparation predates carding by 1000s of years. Indeed, it wasn’t until the mid 1300s before metal workers found a method to create (easily and cheaply?) the thin wire in sufficient quantity needed for the making the small teeth on the carding cloth. Wool combs, on the other hand, could be easily made from wood, bone, or metal and be serviceable.
spinoffmagazine.com...
Three distinct types of fibers can be found in fleeces: wool, hair, and kemp. A wool-growing sheep’s fleece can contain wool alone; wool plus hair; or wool plus hair plus hair plus kemp.
. . .
While the term wool can refer to the entirety of a fleece, it can also be used more specifically to denote the comparatively soft and relatively crimpy fiber component.
In Merino, the fleece is all wool. In a breed like the North Ronaldsay, the undercoat is wool and the outercoat is hair.
www.cotswoldsheep.us.com...
Some early traditions say the Cotswold was brought to England by the Phoenicians (whose early base of operations centered on ancient Tyrus, an island along the coast of Lebanon) sometime between 500 B.C. and 100 B.C.
Proponents of this theory cite the rife trade they carried on with Albion (the British Island where England, Scotland and Wales are located). They also point to the similarities of husbandry practices in the ancient inhabitants of the Cotswold Hills in Britain with those of Levantine flockmasters, particularly the sheep cotes used in ancient Lebanon and Israel, and mentioned several places in the Bible.
. . .
Cotswold was most probably the type of wool used to make the famous sheep's wool "rain cloak" catalogued among the personal possessions of the Roman Emperor Diocletian (285-305 A.D.). This type of garment was normally made from goat fiber (mohair from Angoras and similar breeds of goats).
originally posted by: GENERAL EYES
My parents used to raise and herd Angora Goats and we would shear them occassionally and sell the wool to interested paties locally.
I love winter because it's an opportunity to wear my favorite tranditional wool coat, I absolutely love wool!
Thanks for the interesting insights on it's production processes!
originally posted by: GENERAL EYES
a reply to: JAGStorm
I've never had an opportunity of experience Alpaca Wool, but they are endearing animals.
I'll look around to see if I can find it locally sometime.
(Might be difficult, we're kind of a small town)
Thanks for the heads up!