Wool Rovings
$0.50 – $2.50
Description
Roving
A roving is a long and narrow bundle of fibre. Rovings are produced during the process of making spun yarn from wool fleece, raw cotton, or other fibres. Their main use is as fibre prepared for spinning, but they may also be used for specialised kinds of knitting or other textile arts.
After carding, the fibres lie roughly parallel in smooth bundles. These are drawn out, by hand or machine, and slightly twisted to form lengths suitable for spinning. These unspun strands of fibre are the rovings. Roving can also mean a roll of these strands, the strands in general (as a mass noun), or the process of creating them.
Because it is carded, the fibres are less parallel than the wool top (which is combed) and are not of uniform length. Carded rovings look fluffier than the combed top, which looks smooth and has a high lustre. The fibres in the combed top tend to be of a fairly uniform length due to the method of preparation. Though drawing it into strips may line the fibres up a bit. Roving is not to be confused with sliver as there is a twist in roving.
Additional information
Weight | N/A |
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Dimensions | N/A |
Roving Name | Churro, Jagger, Spanish Merino Comeback, Mohair (Goat), New England |
Roving Color | Merino Fine, Natural White, Dark Brown, Silver Grey, Loose Scoured Sheep, Sheep Sheep, Corriedale Quessant, Mo-Hair Goat, Crossbred Natural Brown, Loose Scoured Locks, Loose Scoured Churro, Dark Grey, Dyed Black Merino, Red |
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