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OverviewWheel designer and maintainer of textile traditions, Alden Amos the recipient and evaluator of traditional wisdom lets no point go unexamined. This is truly a BIG book offering decades of experience in making and handling yarn. He'll change your spinning for the better, whether you agree with him or not.|Being a Compendium of Information, Advice, and Opinion on the Noble Art & Craft Wheel designer and maintainer of textile traditions, Alden Amos the recipient and evaluator of traditional wisdom lets no point go unexamined. This is truly a BIG book offering decades of experience in making and handling yarn. He'll change your spinning for the better, whether you agree with him or not. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alden AmosPublisher: Interweave Press Inc Imprint: Interweave Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 116.80cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.115kg ISBN: 9781883010881ISBN 10: 1883010888 Pages: 496 Publication Date: 17 May 2001 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: Awaiting stock The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsReviewsJust when double-treadle spinning wheels had become popular, Amos caused quite a stir by suggesting that they were not necessarily God's gift to the handspinner. As the owner of a double-treadle spinning wheel, I couldn't resist looking to see if his opinion had changed in the intervening years. Nope. Amos argues here that you don't really need this type of wheel unless, among other things, 'you are such a klutz that you cannot keep the wheel going with one foot.' Amos, who has been making spinning wheels and studying handspinning for more than 40 years, has finally distilled this experience into a definitive book deserving of its title. Even the most knowledgeable spinner will learn something and will be entertained in the bargain. This major contribution to the literature should be in any library where there is demand, though small public libraries may prefer less comprehensive books, such as Lee Raven's Hands on Spinning (1987) or Connie Delaney's Spindle Spinning: From Novice t Just when double-treadle spinning wheels had become popular, Amos caused quite a stir by suggesting that they were not necessarily God's gift to the handspinner. As the owner of a double-treadle spinning wheel, I couldn't resist looking to see if his opinion had changed in the intervening years. Nope. Amos argues here that you don't really need this type of wheel unless, among other things, 'you are such a klutz that you cannot keep the wheel going with one foot.' Amos, who has been making spinning wheels and studying handspinning for more than 40 years, has finally distilled this experience into a definitive book deserving of its title. Even the most knowledgeable spinner will learn something and will be entertained in the bargain. This major contribution to the literature should be in any library where there is demand, though small public libraries may prefer less comprehensive books, such as Lee Raven's Hands on Spinning (1987) or Connie Delaney's Spindle Spinning: From Novice to Expert (Kokovoco, 1998) to offer beginners. - Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc., Library Journal A great and entertaining read...Informative and funny...[despite] the very technical nature of the book. - Spindle and Wheel online magazine <p> Just when double-treadle spinning wheels had become popular, Amos caused quite a stir by suggesting that they were not necessarily God's gift to the handspinner. As the owner of a double-treadle spinning wheel, I couldn't resist looking to see if his opinion had changed in the intervening years. Nope. Amos argues here that you don't really need this type of wheel unless, among other things, 'you are such a klutz that you cannot keep the wheel going with one foot.' Amos, who has been making spinning wheels and studying handspinning for more than 40 years, has finally distilled this experience into a definitive book deserving of its title. Even the most knowledgeable spinner will learn something and will be entertained in the bargain. This major contribution to the literature should be in any library where there is demand, though small public libraries may prefer less comprehensive books, such as Lee Raven's Hands on Spinning (1987) or Connie Delaney's Spindle Spinning: From Novice to Expert (Kokovoco, 1998) to offer beginners. - Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc., Library Journal <p> A great and entertaining read...Informative and funny...[despite] the very technical nature of the book. - Spindle and Wheel online magazine A great and entertaining read. . . . Informative and funny . . . [despite] the very technical nature of the book. --Spindle and Wheel online magazine Author InformationA lifelong tinker and mechanic, Alden Amos built his first spinning wheels in 1962. They were not very good wheels, he says, being more for decoration than for use. By the early 1970's all that had changed. After several stints in the military, in 1974 he became a full time, self-employed wheel builder and production spinner. With a great interest in olden days and olden ways in this book he brings us his experiences as a wheel builder, a handspinner and a weaver. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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