OH MAN the fleece issues make me SO MAD! One of my mom's friends has a sheep ranch (for meat) and ranches used to get their sheep shorn for free because even the low quality wool was useful for all sorts of things, but with the advent of polyester as a cheap fabric/fill, the ranches have to pay to have their sheep shorn and then DISCARD the fleece!!! Couch stuffing, moving blankets, other low quality fiber goods SHOULD BE MADE FROM CHEAP WOOL! Let's stop using plastic when we have really great natural materials available!!!
@daisanders823 жыл бұрын
happens around me :( I've even offered to take it off their hands, as I spin, but they always "forget" to contact me to collect it after they say yes and I then find out they've burnt it or thrown it into landfill T_T
@lizzyrbits12833 жыл бұрын
@@daisanders82 see if you can get in contact with shearers maybe? I think shearing season is really crazy for everyone so once it passes and they realize they forgot to save some back for you, it's too late. But a shearer could tell you when they are scheduled to go to the farms so you could be there as the sheep are shorn? Then you get to save some of the wool, and they don't have to think twice? :)
@daisanders823 жыл бұрын
@@lizzyrbits1283 Oh I've done that too, when the shearers (a local group from down the road) have turned up next door and messaged the owner and the main shearer to remind them and all that jazz but still no cigar :(. I'm probably literally going to have to go over there and do a snatch and run deal as soon as it comes off the sheep lol
@HosCreates3 жыл бұрын
Right? One guy I know has goats with nice fleeces and they have to get thrown away , but thats because his goats get into weeks and tangly
@HosCreates3 жыл бұрын
@@daisanders82 🥺
@saxonhermit3 жыл бұрын
Everyone: Hey, Jimmy, what tips do you have for buying fabric? Jimmy: THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP
@bartolomeothesatyr7 ай бұрын
Teamwork makes the dream work.
@experimentallytheoretical31163 жыл бұрын
I am now very jealous of everyone who lives near proper fabric stores, and not just quilting and craft stores.
@rd62033 жыл бұрын
That was also my reaction. The US is surprisingly *bad* at providing non-Chinese goods
@joanelizabethhall94553 жыл бұрын
@@rd6203 Same here! Sorry, Jimmy, I just don't want a personal relationship with [giant craft/fabric store of your choice.] So it's all online for me. I do have a deeply satisfying relationship with my laptop and my credit card, LOL!
@ashleysovilla20373 жыл бұрын
Same here! When he mentioned going to a tailor shop, I laughed. I’m surrounded by quilting stores. None of the employees even know what I’m asking half the time. The closest fabric store to me doesn’t even sell wool because the owner’s mother is allergic to it. The best natural fiber I could grab there was some bleached muslin.
@melissamanning20153 жыл бұрын
Oh, we used to have proper fabric/yarn/book stores everwhere. I worked in one. Every day people would come in, inspect our goods, ask us questions, take notes, buy nothing, and go home to the internet. I truly applaud the ones who were nimble enough to survive because most didn't.
@rd62033 жыл бұрын
@@melissamanning2015 😢 I truly cannot fathom walking out of a fabric store without having purchased something... unless the line is long. I don't wait well
@CopenhagenDreaming3 жыл бұрын
"I need the money"... So... You're just a poor student doing whatever it takes to get you through Uni? Fair enough! I can't afford all that Patreon stuff, but I can definitely afford a "like" and a comment to show engagement with the content for algorithmic purposes!
@LadyNikitaShark3 жыл бұрын
Don't mind me, just trying to helping the algorithm
@stevezytveld65853 жыл бұрын
Oh, all mighty Algorithm, take this offering from this drab human... {pppst... pass the butter?} - Cathy (&, accidently, Steve), Ottawa/Bytown
@CopenhagenDreaming3 жыл бұрын
@@stevezytveld6585 Hi Cathy, being called "Steve" is surely not the worst thing that could happen. I've been called significantly worse things. (Have we appeased the algorithm yet, I wonder? Also, I'm Danish... I have LOTS of butter, so help yourself! No bacon, though; all the back rashers are exported so we can only buy streaky belly-bacon here. See, Algorithmic Overlord? We're having meaningful conversation in the comments! SUCH ENGAGEMENT!!!)
@stevezytveld65853 жыл бұрын
@@CopenhagenDreaming Such Engagement!!! I am so proud of us all. We're a couple of Gen X Luddites, so I didn't realize I was using Mister Husbands YT account until The Algorithm was trained to know me. Ah well. There are worst things. (I brought the bacon, so we're covered for that, mmm if you could pass the butter... cheers!)
@terenceconnors96273 жыл бұрын
Appreciate the honesty, one full viewing, coming up. Living Anachronism sent me your way, FYI.
@twisted_witch2 жыл бұрын
As a knitter and spinner, your wool addiction warms my soul.
@cuttwice39053 жыл бұрын
"I need the money." Brutal honesty!
@WantedVisual3 жыл бұрын
"Keep this running in the background, because I need the money." ~keeps this running in the background, because I need the noise~
@wannabe_elf3 жыл бұрын
I'm an American knitter who primarily works with wool. I don't know much about where the fabric industry sources their raw materials, but for yarn, most of the wool comes from Peru. Additionally, fiber arts in general appear to be on a bit of a downswing here. A few years ago I could walk into the craft store and find yarn in a wide variety of fiber contents and colors. Now it's all plastic with a limited selection of colors. If I want to get yarn that I consider acceptable for my purposes, I have no choice but to order it online. As I watch this video, I'm knitting a sock using yarn that I ordered from an English shop (it's not sold anywhere in the US) that was spun somewhere in the EU (per the label) using wool grown on South American sheep (per the company's website). The environmental impact of these socks is almost as crazy as I would be if I was no longer allowed to knit.
@zombiekelpie2553 жыл бұрын
I live by the banks of the river Tweed. I can literally see it flowing from my cottage. Around my area there used to be a thriving industry, an amazing amount of high quality tweel (aka tweed) used to be made in my area, and some still is but hoo boy is it expensive! It's just not reasonably priced for the average sewist, it's priced for the market where wealthy people can shop. It's a crying shame that our local mills and weavers mostly died out, and the locals have to buy in from other places if they wish to sew with it for any other reason than making high priced items that are mostly for tourists.
@cadileigh99483 жыл бұрын
don't forget that once made up into a garment you should be able to wear it all your life then pass it on down the generations. So it's not that expensive in the long run.
@ragnkja3 жыл бұрын
@@cadileigh9948 That depends on how often you wear it, but yes, a good quality wool garment should last for many, many wears.
@CourtneySchwartz3 жыл бұрын
@@cadileigh9948 My daughter would not be caught dead wearing her mom’s clothes, and is far taller to boot, so… Definitely won’t have *that* lifespan.
@derrith1877 Жыл бұрын
That brief shot of burn severity prediction of various polyester %/ cotton % was so good! Blacksmiths won't wear any polyester, not even shoelaces, if they care about not getting more burnt than is unavoidable.
@lisajoseph58173 жыл бұрын
It's a balancing act: 1. What can you afford? 2. What is available: locally/ships to your area without prohibitive expense? 3. What compromises are you willing to make? You think wool is hard? Try textiles that look like what was being made in 16th c. Japan.
@beth12svist2 жыл бұрын
You don't even have to go to Japan, even getting brocades that look like the long Regency-era brocades is pretty much impossible. EVERYTHING has more dense, all-over patterning than was popular at the time. EVERYTHING.
@cindabearr3 жыл бұрын
This is actually super helpful to me! Thanks! Also, I'm SCA Viking, but I went to a local Viking group's demo this past weekend, and one of the guys was talking to a visitor about "this channel where the guy is from Wales, and he talks all about Viking stuff." My adhd brain immediately but right in with "The Welsh Viking!! I love Jimmy!!"
@bunhelsingslegacy35493 жыл бұрын
"Every single piece of re-enactment kit I've ever made is wrong." I totally feel you on that. I try to make it less wrong when I redo it, but I've had to get used to "close is good enough" because I am making it for me, not whoever made it in the past. I want to do it all myself, but I think my hobbies already take up most of the house so no matter how much I want a spinning wheel and a loom, it's not happening in this house...
@madsrasmussen55363 жыл бұрын
This mans videos, just keep getting better and better... Im proud to call myself a Welsh Viking fan! 🏴
@ragnaraindrias1543 жыл бұрын
Agree :)
@danew.sammis82873 жыл бұрын
One place I would recommend for folks in the USA is looking for clothing at Renaissance Festivals. While some places there do sell more of what we could call costume pieces (still awesome and high quality) there are venders who specialize in historicaly accurate. I have gotten a lot of my stuff from Ren Faires and Celtic Festivals.
@TocsTheWanderer3 жыл бұрын
I've had no such luck, sadly. I have found plenty of good leather and fur that I can use to make kit pieces.
@angelcollina11 ай бұрын
I have just relocated across the United States to Seattle (toxic family, had to have space) and I’m in the progress of changing my life and how I do things. I guess “detoxing” a bit and cleaning my situation up. I really like the idea of learning crafts like spinning and skills like buying local, sustainable products. It’s a bit overwhelming at the moment (moving’s hella expensive and I’m swamped with debt) but I’ll do several rewatches of this vid and others to get the hang of what I need to do. Thanks for all the inspiration! ❤
@1412mariLU3 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha, the General Advice joke cracked me up way more than it probably should have 😂👌🏼
@margaretbarclay-laughton20863 жыл бұрын
Our irish linen sheets and table cloths were only ever washed on the sunniest days and laid flat on the lawn to sun bleach. When I was younger I could card with the best of them but I only ever tried scutching flax once that was a serious skill
@MarenaPetersdorfHerrera3 жыл бұрын
i live in north America and most of the time i go to thrift or second and or antique stores and possibly get lucky to even find wool fabric, find wool thread and yarn no problem in them kind of stores though, My first Viking apron proudly woven myself on a Warp weighted loom made out of an old bed frame, funny thing though if you ever weave, even if its warped straight, when it gathers like a triangle to the bottom for some reason its the same shape as if one made a Viking apron the upright weaving or the rocks at the bottom seem to tighten as its going along and it develops that way Don't know why but it works though i didn't have to cut the fabric to make it triangular or dress shaped it already wove itself that way.
@Sally4th_3 жыл бұрын
Those antique linen sheets are perfect for base layer things. They've already been washed 1000+ times so are lovely and soft and any garment you make will immediately look lived-in.
@christineherrmann2053 жыл бұрын
I was going to say - it you can find fabric in a reuse shop and can find out fibre content, it's twice as nice.
@l.m.24043 жыл бұрын
I have made so many shifts, smocks, corset covers, petticoats from linen sheets. I love them.
@HosCreates3 жыл бұрын
Where do you find actual linen fabric ? All we have is cotton polyester sheets 🥺
@l.m.24043 жыл бұрын
@@HosCreates I mostly find mine at charity shops and on-line for used. New sheets can be pricey but Restoration Hardware and lots of other retailers sell them, too.
@Sally4th_3 жыл бұрын
@@HosCreates I got a stack a few years back on Ebay, apparently from a house-clearance in France. It's a bit pot-luck as to what condition they're in but if you pick a seller with a decent reputation you should be OK.
@margaretkaraba81613 жыл бұрын
The Textile Society (UK) do two antique textile fairs a year. One in Manchester (Fallowfield) in March and one in Chelsea. You have to get tickets for them via Event Brite
@l.m.24043 жыл бұрын
If you live in the Vancouver area, Sanjo Silk @ 1531 Johnston St has the most marvelous, soft ,100% plain white wool broadcloth from Japan. It is exquisite, reasonably priced and sold in meters. They also specialize in equally wonderful silk fabric, linen&silk fabric plus silk yarn. I love this shop and highly recommend it.
@m.maclellan71473 жыл бұрын
Ooooo ! I think the U.S.A. dollar is strong against the Canadian at the moment, so that would possibly make it worth to get it shipped ?!
@l.m.24043 жыл бұрын
@@m.maclellan7147 These fabrics dye beautifully and would totally be worth the shipping cost for that special outfit.
@AnnAnonyme3 жыл бұрын
I'm also a big fan of dressew on Hastings. Tends to be more affordable. Unfortunately I don't live in Vancouver, but when I come to visit, I always spend money at dressew. Packages of elastic for 25 cents. How can I say no?
@l.m.24043 жыл бұрын
@@AnnAnonyme Sssh, not so loud...we don't want everyone to know. *)
@simonfraser33322 ай бұрын
I remember I went directly to a local sheep farm once (Niagara Canada) to buy wool and the lady there was like "YOU WANT WOOL!? HOW MUCH?!?" and she started filling two whole garbage bags! ^^ she didn't even charge me lol
@hollish196 Жыл бұрын
This is even more difficult then getting genuine heirloom seeds for gardening. Great video! Thank you for the fabulous information.
@FlybyStardancer3 жыл бұрын
This is still a good list of things to think about when buying fabric!
@lananieves45953 жыл бұрын
I don't even have any interest in historical reenactment, and only fell upon your channel by accident, but your enthusiasm and wealth of knowledge are really great things to witness, and all of the information you share is super interesting, even if I have no connection to the world of historical reenactment.
@SusanS5883 жыл бұрын
Loved the peek inside your local fabric shop. There are no longer any real fabric stores within several hundred miles pf where I live, just small versions of the bog box fabric store chain. And nothing even pretending to be wool anymore. I
@lovebirdbaby1 Жыл бұрын
As a re-enactor in Australia it similarly burns my soul that we produce a huge proportion of the world's wool - and it's near impossible to find here. It's a specialty and it's expensive - but it's made right here! I have legimiately bought wool from overseas...made in Australia. Insane. Not to mention sheep are pretty awful for our eco-systems.
@solveigw3 жыл бұрын
In Norway sheep farmers usually only sell the spring fleece. When they’ve been out all summer the fleece is full of twigs and dirt and tangles, so the wool factories aren’t that interested… Which is really sad. Other than that Norwegian wool is quite high quality! If you live in Scandinavia or Germany, and you’re a beginner, you can shop for wool at Selfmade (earlier Stof og Stil). They have some patterns for simple garments as well (trousers/ shirts/ tunics/ etc)
@nannalange66963 жыл бұрын
I used to work for Selfmade and a lot of the wool is mixed with polyester :)
@RavenAttwoode3 жыл бұрын
The fleece with dirt and twigs in it makes for some amazing compost. Slow release nitrogen as it breaks down, helps improve water retention but also improves aeration, and also provides some insect prevention when used to top dress the soil. Maybe some organic farmers or gardeners would purchase the dirty fleece?
@ragnkja3 жыл бұрын
@@nannalange6696 That’s my impression as well. I haven’t looked there recently, but the times I have looked it’s been impossible to find 100% wool, only wool blends. They also don’t provide much information about the weave of the fabrics.
@nannalange66963 жыл бұрын
@@ragnkja When I worked there, we didn't get super many reenactors (even though there's many in our area, especially viking reenactors). They'd rather go to StofShop in Åbyhøj instead. She has great wools, but I don't know if she ships outside Denmark.
@Threadbndr3 жыл бұрын
LoL. I did once wet ret flax in the upstairs tub. Mom vetoed that after the smell made it's way downstairs.
@catherinemcnamara11413 жыл бұрын
I bought an old tub from the tip shop to ret my flax in - it lives outside, with netting over it to stop the mozzies and flies laying eggs in there!
@Threadbndr3 жыл бұрын
@@catherinemcnamara1141 that's an excellent idea. I am mostly spinning wool these days, but I am sure I will get back to linen at some point. I still have all my tools
@tetchedistress3 жыл бұрын
Hello Jimmy and all, While I knit, crochet, sew, spin and weave, I am currently not able to do much homespun woven fabrics at this time. Access to the wool is a bit limited living in a small town like I do. However, I do try to get all natural fibers in various weaves. It's fun to stitch my totally inaccurate clothing. I enjoy the hobby whether or not I produced the garment from raw materials, or from modern materials. Thank You Jimmy, for another lovely video. I am glad that you aren't trying to work outside your wheelhouse with recommendations. You Sir, are a gentleman in my opinion. Take care all. Hugs from Minnesota.
@madinahagberg49423 жыл бұрын
Hey neighbor
@tetchedistress3 жыл бұрын
@@madinahagberg4942 howdy, huge hugs neighbor
@madinahagberg49423 жыл бұрын
@@tetchedistress have you perchance had any fabric luck at S.R. Harris in Anoka? I can’t find wool locally anywhere...except Longville
@sarahjarden83063 жыл бұрын
I'm in Northern Ireland, I thoroughly recommend The Flax Mill in Dungiven. Amazing linen (including handwoven) and 100% wool.
@LucretiaPearl3 жыл бұрын
I always feel jealous of you & Bernadette Banner for being able to have fabric/garment districts so accessible. But I do have one of the shops some of the reenactors of the Scottish 1630s like in driving distance. I have to say it's very sad that those fleeces are being burned. Even though I don't need any roving, yarn or fabric, I'd rather add to my collection of backed up projects than see such resources go to waste!
@angelcollina11 ай бұрын
The backed up projects is a true mood!
@LadyNikitaShark3 жыл бұрын
For Europeans and specially for the brits, if you are traveling to Portugal for vacations, check out the fabric stores that are all around, even in small towns. You can find natural fabrics made locally by very specialized workers.
@TheWelshViking3 жыл бұрын
Ooh, that sounds wonderful
@constanziadezamora3 жыл бұрын
Wool in Australia is mostly shipped to about 52 countries (but mostly China) to get turned into fabric. Given we only have one wool mill left in Tasmania and but not so much on a roll as a queen size blanket for $550...., the fabric we can get hold of here is imported from some other country. (Probably from China). The locals laughed at us when we bought some Australian wool in Spain. It's just tricky to get. :)
@EnnameMori3 жыл бұрын
It is utterly infuriating. I saw NZ wool the other day! Which was at least better quality than every other wool I saw on the shelves.
@daphnejoly8293 жыл бұрын
Well I am actually from Normandy just near Vernon, so... Thank you for showing my home !!!
@MsSteelphoenix Жыл бұрын
Couldn't agree more. I am forever on the lookout for linen, and charity shops are in fact a godsend for costuming. Find your locals and lurk. Sometimes the staff will recognise you and set things aside if you ask nicely! If you're in Auckland, New Zealand, pop into Geoff's Emporium on Dominion Road or Ike's Emporium in Devonport. They never have the same thing twice (though they'll almost always have plain-coloured cotton or linen), they will let you do burn tests if you ask nicely, and once I got 5m of 100% mohair wool fabric for $10/metre. Also, I'm really glad that you're honest about 'I need the money' - I'd rather that than someone being all delicate about it.
@bonelace1113 жыл бұрын
Sew Much History has a great post about the unavoidable fact that no consumer choice is ever going to meet all of our ideals (environmental/ethical/budget/local) even before you get to the "authenticity" question, so it's always going to be a tradeoff, but at least we can make it an informed one. It lists a bunch of different criteria that might be important to your personal choices, then outlines some of the pros/tradeoffs/factors you might not have considered before, and common greenwashing/ethicswashing terms to be aware of. Super helpful to go through and make yourself a personal "list" of what you want to prioritise when you shop, whereever and however that works for you (and also for catching yourself before judging other people for making different choices, because they will have had to make different tradeoffs)
@kajlith3 жыл бұрын
I've found lovely stuff from an upholsterers, really nice linens, so that's worth a go.
@caitlinsmith50753 жыл бұрын
Since you mentioned Australia and NZ, I wanted to shout out a good place for people there to buy from - The Fabric Store! Great selections of linen, wool, silk and cotton, and they’re very clear on fibre content too which is great. There are of course smaller shops in each city, but that is a good one that has outlets in a few major cities, and a great online shop that isn’t shipping from across the world (=affordable and ethical)
@TheWelshViking3 жыл бұрын
Oh amazing, thank you so much, Caitlin!
@katelynpatterns96113 жыл бұрын
The Fabric Store is pretty amazing, they really do include a lot of information, I’ve seen staff burn testing fabrics that have just arrived to confirm the fibre content. If you’re on a budget, don’t mind a blend and in or around Melbourne I’d also recommend Darn Cheap fabrics, they generally have a pretty good range but what’s in stock can vary quite a bit seasonally
@EnnameMori3 жыл бұрын
They are great (as are their colour ranges), but when it comes to wool you are really only set if you want jersey. But if you want broadcloth then they are not very helpful at all.
@Aswaguespack3 жыл бұрын
The advice you provide is sound for any types of specific purchases for anyone who may be interested in accurate historical materials for whatever use needed. 👍🏻👍🏻
@fionacreates3 жыл бұрын
As someone who lives down the road from the Leeds Markets fun to know you found good stuff there!! (as I always find too). Lots of excellent advice even when you don't re-enact and just want to make nice clothes... Thanks very much to General Advice for the information.
@danukicreative3 жыл бұрын
I'm not a reenactor myself, but do make costumes, and I love the fabric hunt. Last year I discovered that one of the fabric stalls at fantasy/reenactment events also has a webshop. They are located in the Netherlands, called Classic Fabrics. And I believe they ship worldwide. I have not burn tested the fabrics, but the linnen felt great as did the wool. Now I do wanna burn test them to know. Thanks Jimmy for giving me the urge to set things on fire :P
@floorwagemakers87063 жыл бұрын
I can tell you as a repeating customer their stuff is great and also somewhat catered towards viking reenactment. Btw also check their facebook page: a selyem turul (or @dezijdenvalk) for their hand dyed fabrics.
@kkeegan323 жыл бұрын
Leaving it on in the background during my lunch at work because you need the 💰🤑money 💰🤑🤪🙃😅
@souixaan3 жыл бұрын
as someone who no longer needs the fabric but misses your face i put this on just to get you the money so i laughed when you said that.
@goblincavecrafting3 жыл бұрын
I genuinely love it when people with a lot of experience in a certain area sit down and chat like this. I love your videos and this was no exception. I have no need to buy bolts of fabric myself but listening to the things you’re passionate about is super inspiring, and a lot of the topics you cover are good advice for sourcing lots of types of material/object anyway. There’s always that balance or trade off between what you can afford and what your criteria are done ethical buying. Great video, looking forward to more in the future as always.
@ragnkja3 жыл бұрын
Yes, if you’re going to be around fire, use organic fibre, not synthetic! When I was a child, a girl in my school got severe burns from a red spirit burner that was refilled while it was still very hot. She was wearing a synthetic jumper, so her arms and much of her torso ended up with third degree burns, but her bra and her trousers were cotton, and those almost certainly saved her life.
@invadersin52033 жыл бұрын
Thrift/ Op shops can give you amazing finds, especially if you live in an area with an older community. I found 4m of silk taffeta for $2. I have a local op shop that regularly has suiting fabrics, sometimes wools. A lot of the sites I have found for fabrics that might be suitable, is through the local sewing community, modern bag makers and seamstresses have all sorts of weird and wonderful recommendations :)
@lizzaturnbull2 жыл бұрын
Aww hubby and I went to Harris and Lewis a few years ago! Not only is it wool heaven , but it is stunningly beautiful to visit 🥰🥰
@elizabethmcglothlin54063 жыл бұрын
Thanks for mentioning charity shops--second-hand stores are good, too. Great Gran passes and her fabric stash gets donated. I've had some wonderful finds there. (And there's a lot of fabric in a pleated wool skirt!)
@suddenlyconcrete72953 жыл бұрын
I got you fam. I'm listening to this while driving a 13 hour trip here in the US. No worries though I turned it on at a gas station and left this comment before I left the parking lot.
@ashleysovilla20373 жыл бұрын
I’m a huge advocate for buying as locally as I can for all things I cannot currently produce for myself. But now you have me torn after discussing wool growers in the UK burning sheep’s wool due to lack of demand. I’d be happy to support a small scale wool producer in the UK despite being in the U.S. if it means keeping quality, ethically harvested wool from going to waste!
@katherinemorelle71153 жыл бұрын
Sheep farmers in the US are having to do the same burning of their wool, I believe. It’s an international issue.
@ashleysovilla20373 жыл бұрын
@@katherinemorelle7115 it’s so frustrating that a quality product is going to waste because consumers prefer cheaper, poor quality stuff instead.
@lyssamedana22243 жыл бұрын
If you go on eBay, and then look at the fabric section under the crafts sections, one of the sort functions is item location. I just had a quick look at wool within 20 miles and near the top was a 3m length of something described as all wool, made in Huddersfield, around £15 but pending further bids. Obviously based in West Yorkshire, there is plenty of bits. NB this is stuff being sold within 20 miles, not made within 20 miles. The listings can also give you clues about shops that are around and local. Sometimes just going on Google Maps and using the search function for fabric shop can also give clues. Thank you for sharing this.
@CaptRons18thcentury2 жыл бұрын
as an 18th century reenactor... was surpried to hear you mention Burnley and Trowbridge... Excellant video and advise...
@SpinsterOlive3 жыл бұрын
For me, the process is has always been the fun part of making anything. I learned to knit when I was in elementary school, and as soon as I learned to cable, I started seeking out the most complicated stuff I could make. I don't make a lot, because I don't end up using it that much, but I'll try to find unique patterns when I need to make someone a gift so I don't get bored while doing it. I picked up a book called "Knitting with Dog Hair" from a used bookstore a LONG time ago, more than a decade, and always intended to try spinning. It took until now for me to start, after reading "Medieval Garments Reconstructed" and looking at all the information on the spinning and weaving techniques used. So I'm learning to spin now (on a drop spindle! Spinning wheels scare me. Though sewing machines also scare me, so that's not too surprising). And it's fun. Once I get good enough, I hope to make enough to learn to weave with. I live in Southern California, so I'm going to see if I can get in contact with some local or semi-local sheep raisers that can't sell their wool so I can buy it (I got my initial 2 pound batch of Corriedale from Paradise Fibers up in Washington). I've gathered shed fur from my dog and processed that into rolags so I can make something with it (it makes a very nice grey). I haven't reached out to any local reenactment groups about anything yet, and this all started within the last 2 months or so, but I'm looking forward to where this ends up going. I might even end up making some videos about it.
@AtticHistorian3 жыл бұрын
My 3 week old kitten, Thor, was glued to this video in between getting his formula fix. Lol
@TheWelshViking3 жыл бұрын
Prrr. Meow. Sniff sniff. Lick. Prrrr prrrr.
@ctennyo133 жыл бұрын
Well said. I grew up as a civil war reenactor in the US and building a community with the people making the goods was one of my favorite parts of the hobby. On the topic of being an 'expert' on something, I had an anthropology professor who gave me my favorite way of describing my knowledge. Even when referencing his own credentials he'd say this was his 'area of least ignorance'. And I now give that phrase to you to use as you please!
@ladyliberty4173 жыл бұрын
Great advice if you sew clothing for any reason, I have been in Edinburgh looking for fabric just for fun, to bring home a souvenir of Scotland- I think it’s awesome you are keeping history alive, Thank you ❣️
@EnnameMori3 жыл бұрын
Ahahahaha finding wool in Australia that isn't light weight, that is a challenge. We also export most of our wool in the first place leaving us with a dearth. Although we are pretty set for linen. :)
@ragnkja3 жыл бұрын
How often do you _want_ to wear heavier wool in Australia?
@EnnameMori3 жыл бұрын
@@ragnkja All winter, partsof spring and autumn. It is currently 2C outside without counting wind chill. Not all of Australia is tropical or hot.
@rickshaw19713 жыл бұрын
I don't sew, only knit, in New Zealand. It's an odd situation. If I go for NZ produced wool, it's either a raw fleece from the farmer, which may or may not be sent to one of the several local mills for scouring and carding, or it's coming back to the motherland via a detour through something like Holst Garn in Denmark.
@amaliaseven73 жыл бұрын
I thought I would put this on in the background while I did some little chores but NO I was glued all the way through 😂 thank you Jimmy!
@deehappy433 жыл бұрын
For some reason this video is where it really clicked for me that part of this hobby is about having a relationship with your "stuff" that is more grounded than just... I saw it in a shop. About knowing things about the history of your material culture and about construction methods and even knowing some of the people who made the things and how and when they did it. Having a connection to the things you use. I know many people have talked about this in different ways but here is where it really clicked, that this is what attracts me to the hobby.
@IreneFriederike3 жыл бұрын
Cultivating a relationship with local businesses really is worth it if you plan to buy fabric more than just once. I like going to my local fabric store because the woman who runs it now knows me and will get the wool out from the back (because it is Summer and nobody else is buying wool) and she knows the colors I like. This Spring we had to do some “Call&Collect” because non-essential stores weren’t allowed customers inside the store; her knowing my preferences ensured that I was super-happy with the fabric she chose based on what I’d asked for over the phone.
@alexandercocke23033 жыл бұрын
I was SERIOUSLY WONDERING AND RESEARCHING THIS ALL DAY LONG!!! Seriously coincidental and helpful. Thank you!
@etainne20013 жыл бұрын
add this to the list of things that bend my paperclip, the shops that didn't survive. Ten years ago, i could have my pick of 15 shops, some wool exclusive as there is some angora sheep raising in the area, all closed now with only the wal-hobby-Ann's still around. Texan appreciates your shout out to Dusty, may his family be easy for his passing.
@mildlycornfield3 жыл бұрын
Not only will reputable places be able to tell you the details of their products, they'll be *happy* to tell you the details of their products
@sarahmwalsh3 жыл бұрын
Well said!! I think it's so important to make these points about what goes into the sourcing of fabrics. Relationships are at the heart of living history in so many ways and this is definitely one of them!
@lelaniadam3 жыл бұрын
In Cape Town we have fabric centres/stores, the owners and staff are extremely proud of their industry - so, always willing to assist. Asking nicely works wonders.
@roweng.4245 Жыл бұрын
I go to estate sales sometimes, and the first thing I check is whether the house had a sewing room. I once staggered over to a checkout table with my arms full of as much wool and linen as I could carry, asked "how much?" and one of them said bemusedly, "ten dollars?" Estate sales can be very good sources (although not always.)
@button46313 жыл бұрын
You need the money, I enjoy hearing your voice even though I don't sew or need fabric. Win win As a New Zealander, I will say it's just as frustrating here. Farmers are paying more to sheer the sheep than they can sell the wool for yet New Zealand wool is super expensive overseas. And buying wool or wool fabrics made here is super super rare.
@catherinemcnamara11413 жыл бұрын
Yeah, we don't have the tech to spin/weave the really fine stuff here in NZ. A lot of NZ wool goes overseas to be made into fabric, and then comes back to NZ to be sold. It's a real shame.
@HopeEvey3 жыл бұрын
I love listening to anyone nerd out about fabric and fiber. Hearing Jimmy do so is just lovely icing on the fabric cake :)
@wendygore27093 жыл бұрын
I am Welsh, but grew up in the US w/an English Gran & EVERYTHING she had, clothes, blankets etc, was all real 100% wool. Certain things were a little itchy, but nothing beats the the durability of real wool👍 My sister still has some of the wool blankets Gran brought w/her from where they lived in Cambridge. Thanks to them being stored in cedar closets & hope chests. Although I have seen an ad the other day for 100% wool socks & the company owns/shears their very own sheep!! Unfortunately, I cannot remember the name. So sorry to hear about the waste of all that wool😕 Bums me out, mate🐑
@loraleitourtillottwiehr24733 жыл бұрын
Your method of fabric buying sounds much like my method of buying food at the farmers market, which is delightful. I'd never thought of buying other products that way. And now I wish I could always shop that way...
@jackiejames45513 жыл бұрын
I found this video both very entertaining and very informative. Thanks Jimmy for being honestly you. It's why we love you.
@TheWelshViking3 жыл бұрын
:3 Gawrsh
@hazet13 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate the continued flags that Australia exits
@starfirebird30993 жыл бұрын
I consider myself lucky to even have a rather expensive shop two hours away that has any 100% wool, linen, or silk at all; the last state I lived in had none in half a day's drive. It's all quilting shops, Joann, Walmart, and Hobby Lobby(ew). But anyhow, High Fashion Fabric Center in Houston is neat
@bectionaryadams8046 Жыл бұрын
Im a reenactor in UK, and I use a company called Herts fabrics. They have some lines of wool and linen that are suitable for reenactment
@catherineleslie-faye43022 ай бұрын
I admit to buying cabbage ie fabric scraps from friends or from thrift stores & flea markets... I have been known to frequent yard sales where I pick up wool garments to make my renfaire and fantasy event garb from... I also buy hand spun yarn from vendors who own their own goats and sheep... And who if I request it will spin me a 4 ply yarn of cotton linen silk and wool to trim garment made of ironcloth. I have been known to gather wool fleece to use as padding in garments from folks who inherited it after a death in their family/friends circle. I will use reclaimed polyester for my mundane clothes but those are a patchwork Holly Hobbie kind of clothing and not worn around live flames. I figure if I wear it to shreds for 5 or 10 years then that keeps it out of the landfill as I use those shreds to fill my pillows. If you hear of anyone near Portland OR USA needing to get rid of wool of any kind or weight please send them my way... I need to make a new winter coat.
@TudorositiesbyMaureen3 жыл бұрын
I have a lovely friends who I know though the SCA, who I purchase all my tablet weave from. Made some awesome garters from their weaving. Great advice get to know your artisans, fabric vendors, and merchants. It takes time but worth investing in the relationship.
@kmaher14243 жыл бұрын
I do not sew but there are two huge fabric stores in downtown Houston that get mentioned when reenactors come to visit. One sells for clothing, the other for decorating, owned by the same Asian family. Serious digging will probably produce results.
@Korina423 жыл бұрын
Do the shops have names, or should we guess?
@michaelsheridan6177 Жыл бұрын
12:34 “But trial and error is absolutely central to reenactment.” HEAR HEAR! This could also be said for non-historical costuming, crafting in general, and really just a whole lot of LIFE itself. I desperately wish this was a concept I could impart to more people. I can’t help but find it tiresome when I run into people again and again who want detailed instructions, down to the tiniest minutiae, about this or that, and all I can tell them is “mess around and see what works and what doesn’t.” You’re going to screw some stuff up at first. It’s just part of the process. You’ve got to get your hands dirty. 🤷♂️
@flawlix Жыл бұрын
I live in Southern California, and finding 100% wool locally is shockingly difficult. Almost everything is a low wool content blend with acrylic or polyester in it. LA Fashion District tends to be the best place to look, but it’s a mixed bag on whether you’ll find anything. I’m always scouting for more wool and ordering swatches online. Fortunately, we do have an excellent local source for linen. Our costume mistress has started making some concessions to the heat and allowing wool-cotton blends so that we don’t die.
@robintheparttimesewer67983 жыл бұрын
I try to buy local cause I want to touch the fabric!! That and I like my local places and want them to thrive!
@slinky.blackcat99653 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, Jimmy. I picked up a free floor loom last year... and I still don't know how to use it 😂😭 my English cotton-weaving ancestors must be so frustrated with me 😬😅
@juliapfann4362 жыл бұрын
I really do understand this - I am very picky and sometimes quite hard to get something special. Here in Austria linen (if it is not plant dyed) it's not a problem, but wool in special weaving-qualities is a big problems, so I order these on the internet. For the wool for my tabletwaving I have a friend, who dies the wool with authentic materials.
@elizap138 ай бұрын
This particular episode was fun, from a fiber arts perspective. It would be fun to have some sort of guest interaction with a spinners weavers and dyers guild near you that is working on a historical project. For example, my guild has a small contingent working on a full huldremose costume from scratch. We're probably a bit out of your way, though the project is open to the public via Stanwick Lakes.
@permiebird9373 жыл бұрын
Your video reminds me of how lucky I am that my SCA Barony has a Pendleton Woolen Mills outlet in it. The cloth is no longer made down the road from the outlet 😥, but the outlet still has really great prices on 100% worsted wool. When I first played SCA in my teens, it was pre internet, and research was really hard, especially because on the US west coast in the 70s and early 80s, libraries mostly had Victorian and early 20th century books on fashion history, and we were far removed from any sort of European medieval history stuff. Costumes of that era were very strange and alarmingly inaccurate, acetate satin and poly cotton twill much? Same when I played again in my mid 20s. When I returned to playing about a decade later, the internet had become a thing, and SCA research had blossomed. Now, at events, when conversation moves to garb, newcomers get pointed to the Pendleton outlet during their first event.
@tinuvianna2 жыл бұрын
I live in Portland, OR, USA, and I finally went to the Pendleton wool outlet here last week. There was gorgeous wool there at gobsmackingly good prices. And as far as I could tell from the informational signs at the store, it's all, or mostly all, sourced from and processed within the state of Oregon. If you live near one of these outlets or or are visiting this area, definitely stop by.
@roxiepoe95863 жыл бұрын
One of the most enjoyable things about being a potter is the community of potters. Learning from the others and making contacts and sometimes friends is enriching to the lifestyle. So - I hear what you are saying.
@RunningRoosterFarm2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I am all process, but I will get to wearing it yet. Dying fabric just now. Fall is a good time for it.
@ShinySarah443 жыл бұрын
Heck yeah, fabric discussions! I really appreciate the disclaimer at the start; I see a lot of questions around yarn (because crocheter rather than sewist), and it's so hard to convey what the best solution is; but I do try to explain there isn't necessarily right or wrong. It's down to individual situation, in location, ethics, finance, project, preference, experience and so much more. So much of it can just come down to F around and find out. lol. I am more and more responding to questions with that phrase, because so much understanding comes from own failures/mistakes/issues, rather than an answer from someone else's experience.
@januzzell86313 жыл бұрын
As much as I found this entire video fascinating and very interesting, may I say how much I enjoyed 'Helpful Jimmy's' background music ^*^ - so chill
@MacMoonie3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the honesty "please don't leave.... I need the MONEY" I need to figure out how to even START when I don't know any of the background things you talk about... I need to even know where to get linen or wool nothing is made in Saskatchewan... and no one has been here LOL
@MonicaLeaАй бұрын
Find a fiber artist! Seriously, it might take a while, but a spinner/weaver would jump at the chance to give such a project a go.
@Heather-xm9ul Жыл бұрын
Wool is actually difficult to burn, compared to more readily available organic materials. I've recently started getting ads for wool building insulation, because it's better than fiber glass and that weird paper based crap. I've looked into it, and it really looks like a great option for wool ranchers. I hope it catches on.
@Madeleinewith3Es3 жыл бұрын
"or in the bath, maybe" ok yes I just finished washing four yards of linen in the same bathtub I've put dye buckets/tubs for multiple costumes. Also yes befriend folks in the local community, I have friends who did SCA and Belegarth locally who moved last summer, now I have a massive stack of fabric boxes of stuff they couldn't take, including natural-tone linen canvas and 10+ yards of silk crepe. I've bartered a rope belt I made for getting 3d printed parts for a cosplay with another friend, and now I'm learning leather work to make parts for both larp and Mando kits and then (hopefully) sell them since friends I've talked to about them are interested. Local communities are great.
@nemoignorat24433 жыл бұрын
The situation of wool production is just sad. Wool is one of the best fiber we have. In its best it is a fiber produced by the sun. (Sheep eat the gras which grows with sunlight and sheep grow their hair by eating gras.) And meadows are great carbon dioxide accumulators. So, buy more wool. Preferably local wool.
@daveyboi98073 жыл бұрын
I will always watch your videos all the way through, you are just too damn adorable.
@madsrasmussen55363 жыл бұрын
Going to Hedeby tomorrow, imma find some good stuff!!
@MayYourGodGoWithYou3 жыл бұрын
As to fabric from China. Him Wan did a fascinating series where he visited China and visited a number of different factories, including ones where your pair of jeans were probably made. They may not have great pay by our standards but working conditions etc are very often greatly in advance of western factories. Much to my surprise having only had the lies from the western (read USA and acolytes) press. It seems the bosses long since discovered that a happy workforce makes for a workforce which has a better production rate, and a workforce which is merely just forcing themselves to make it to the next payday is likely to be an unhappy workforce with a lower, both in quality and quantity, production rate. Oh, and they have better quality control as well. Well worth watching, you might be very surprised.
@alankyle40823 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Lots of tips on what to look for, for when I'm at Torm this weekend, Cheers 🍻
@GreenLarsen3 жыл бұрын
ok, this went in a different direction then I assumed :D I assumed it was going to be about wool, and more specificly about the different breeds of sheep and which are the closest the period sheep. But this was also good