Carol Ekarius is the coauthor of The Fleece & Fiber Sourcebook, The Field Guide to Fleece, and Storey s Guide to Raising Sheep, and the author of several books including Small-Scale Livestock Farming, Storey s Illustrated Guide to Poultry Breeds, and Storey s Illustrated Breed Guide to Sheep, Goats, Cattle, and Pigs. She lives in the mountains of Colorado. Deborah Robson is co-author of The Fleece & Fiber Sourcebook and Knitting in the Old Way. She is a former editor of both Shuttle, Spindle & Dyepot and Spin-Off magazine, and she is currently the editor and publisher of Nomad Press, which publishes books on traditional and ethnic knitting and spinning. Robson is also an artist, working in textiles, printmaking, and oils. She lives in Colorado with her daughter.
"Every once in a while there is a book that lives up to it's hype.
Only once in a blue moon are we lucky enough to get a book that
surpasses all the stories that have led up to it. The Fleece and
Fiber Sourcebook is a blue moon book. The spinning world has been
buzzing about this book for years, and Deb Robson has been kind
enough to share writing the process on her blog, but that still
didn't prepare me for the completeness of the book. The sheer
complexity of the subject made clear, useful and not just
interesting, but fascinating. More than 200 animal fibers and
breeds laid out and dissected by an animal expert and a spinning
expert jump off of the page in concise prose that speaks to the
history of the breed; fleece, fiber and lock characteristics; using
the fiber in dyeing, spinning, knitting and weaving. The
photography is crisp enough to count crimps and shows fiber as
washed and unwashed; prepped and spun, and sometimes knit or woven.
The authors manage to do all of this using 2-4 pages per breed.
Spinners (and knitters) this is the book you've been asking for:
more photos and breeds than In Sheep's Clothing and more sheepy and
animal goodness than The Knitter's Book of Wool. A labor of sheepy
love and a stellar book."--Library Journal
Not only is this a library essential for yarn users who take their
wool, alpaca, llama, cashmere and yak seriously; it's also an
important text for those involved in the husbandry of our
four-legged fiber friends. If we want to preserve our "heirloom"
fibers, we need to know their names.--Interweave Knits
This is an excellent resource for fiber artists curious about
different types of animal fibers and how best to use them.--Vogue
Knitting
Two experts, one a farmer and livestock guru, the other a fiber
magazine editor, join brains to produce this resource for yarn
crafters. Far from drab and dreary, Robson and Ekarius enliven the
pictures and descriptions of about 200 breeds of sheep, inserting
critical information and fun facts. Well written and researched, a
reference for all ages.
Starred review--Craftzine
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