For twenty years was besotted with 5-ply/ 1,000 ypp gansey yarn. That despite the fact that the first weatherproof fabrics that I produced were socks from https://www.macauslandswoollenmills.com/. I knit a lot of very serviceable camping, climbing, and ski gear from MacAusland's yarn.
Nevertheless, there was always the siren call of Sheringham ganseys. I should have given in to the call 10 years ago, and moved to spinning finer yarns, that could be knit into finer ganseys.
Ok, the spinning is not as fast - I spin 11,200 ypp singles at about 300 yards per hour compared to the almost 600 yards per hour of coarser singles. Plying is not as fast, but I do it on the spinning bobbins that I use to spin the singles - that means balls of plied yarn are ~30 grams - just like the balls of BeeHive Yarn that Baldwin mills sold all those years ago.
The fine fabric that I knit from Rambouillet yarn is translucent - and if I wear it in sunny California, I will get sunburned. I need to spin a similar yarn from that pile of Romney that I dyed navy blue. I made several tries at that over the last couple of months and was never happy with the result - I just threw a big handful of those swatches away.
One problem was bias. The lines of knit stitches did not run straight - they spiraled (when knit in the round.) In some ways, fine singles are harder to ply than coarse singles.
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