GATHER - Mohair Sock
GATHER - Mohair Sock
ULTRA LIMITED QUANTITIES AVAILABLE.
Never super washed, the yarn in this collection has been naturally mordanted to lock in the color as much as possible. Spinning oils from the mill have been removed using plant based laundry soap. We then hand dye it ourselves using sustainably harvested plants, insects & food waste. Scroll down for details on each of our hand dyed color ways. Our best attempt will be made to select complimentary skeins for your project.
MOHAIR SOCK
50g 200+ yards /182 meters
- 18.2 micron American RAMBOUILLET 75% blended with 25% MOHAIR
- 2 ply semi-worsted spun SOCK Yarn
- 7 sts per inch on US size 2-3 needles 28 sts = 4"
- crochet hook size C
- dyed by hand on the farm using sustainably sourced plants, insect shells & food waste
- available in NATURAL UNDYED, STRAWBERRY MACARON, HEIRLOOM TOMATO
One skein = 3 bales of hay for the flock
(Our critters consume 14 bales of locally grown hay per day from October - May when our pastures are resting. Your support puts hay in the barn and employs both the Mitchell team and the local hay grower.)
Natural dyes are like snowflakes, each skein will vary and you should alternate skeins throughout your piece to achieve a subtle blend. Do not dry or store in direct sun. Hand wash & care for it like the heirloom it is. Natural dyes soften & fade like your favorite jeans, getting softer in hue with time. This is not a defect. It's nature.
Heirloom Tomato Tart - on Mohair, Camel & Suri alpaca (all 3 Gather bases)
Dyed on farm using Madder which is derived from a root and has been used to dye rich reds since the 16 & 17th century, with found textiles retaining their color hundreds of years later! Originating from the subcontinent of India, Central Asia and Europe.
Green Bean Casserole - on Camel & Suri Alpaca (only)
This shade of true green has been a goal of Cindy & Sherry since we started out in this botanical dyeing venture. Green is tough, it doesn't seem like it would be but obtaining a true Grassy goodness is kind of tricky. There was a lot of dull grey to get to this glorious GREEN. Cindy achieved it with Mulberry and chlorophyll.
Butternut Squash - on Camel & Suri Alpaca (only)
Dyed with Marigolds that we grown on the farm, our yellows are vibrant on rambouillet with a white base but add the beautiful pecan colors of Camel & Suri Alpaca and you get a glorious grunge-y deep yellow hue. The shade of a sunflower as it starts to wilt. Rich, amber, vibrant. And bonus! our spent dye matter is fed to the pigs after, that's one terrifically closed loop dye process!
Pecan Pie - Camel & Suri Alpaca - undyed
Undyed and naturally perfect, it's as close to the bouncing lambs in the field that you can get. A soft natural brown that has true woody hues.
Natural Mohair - undyed, Heirloom Tomato Tart, Strawberry Macaron
Undyed and naturally perfect, it's as close to the bouncing lambs in the field that you can get. But add kids. 25% of this yarn comes from white & grey mohair goats and thus gives the yarn a lofty multi-tonal hue in a natural undyed yarn. Heirloom Tomato Tart & Strawberry Macaron are the only colors that we dye the mohair sock.
The reason we decided to become a Yarn Company is to support the effort of bringing back American Fiber production. As a former interior designer Sherry knew all too well how many fabric mills had closed as a result of NAFTA and the increased importation of cheap labor and synthetic fabrics flooding the American market. The impact on rural North Carolina alone is devastating. Families' livelihoods GONE.
When she read Vanishing Fleece, by Clara Parkes it launched a drive to do something to support the wool industry. This is how we wound up with 170+ sheep grazing the rolling hills of our farm. But we alone can only responsibly support 200 sheep max on our land. At festivals, farmers of small flocks were imploring upon us to buy their fleeces, because wholesale collectives don't pay nearly the cost of shearing let alone coming close to offsetting the cost to raise sheep in a farm setting ethically. We, as farmers ourselves, know this cost all too well! Thus, American Fiber by Mitchell Wool was born! Look for our first farm partnership to launch this fall with a stunning low micron Shetland yarn!
Our first effort was to rescue an entire closed mills worth of fiber from being shipped overseas. We don’t know the particular farm this came from, it was sent in to the old mill to be processed and after they closed everything was auctioned. We bought all of the wool to keep it here in the USA. Our newest endeavor is to become an equitable resource for small farms to sell their clips to a Fellow farm who fully understands the value of raising it. We pay higher rates than the wholesale cooperatives so it’s an option for small farms to unload their fiber. (so long as they raise their animals with the care and standards that we hold as foundations of our practice. Animal welfare and environmental stewardship that reflects our goals)