Well, the local stores were sold out of bird suet cakes so I made some out of the leftover bacon grease, leftover pancakes, the bread butts, old stale pickling spices, crisco, cat food and dog biscuits. It can not be said that Valerie is not brave in the kitchen. I cooked it, poured it into trays, let it cool, and put it outside. They are now attracting about 100 birdies, but I'm not going to show you the picture I took, because it more or less resembled dog barf and was disgusting and you wouldn't have been able to eat your dinners.
I'm proud to say, for a first attempt, my leftover muss muss bird stuff, is attracting way more birds than the commercial stuff. Going to think of them as "free range chickens" of the most free type imaginable.
Here is something I bet you've not put together in your yarn batts before, silver mohair, natural-- and four shades of green:
and this one is coral, pink mohair, some of the goldenrod yellow, and a bit of white from Bev, enough for two 8-ounce skeins:
and just for those learning drum carding, here's some of Bev's dyed spotty stuff (so wonderful) to show how that, and my dyed pink, changes as it's being carded. After it went through once, it was pulled into strips, turned around, and put through a second time to give you the result in the background:
This may seem like a lot of work. Why combine colors and then just mix them all together again? It's because, with the artist's trained eye, this creates layers of depth, layers of subtlety. The fibers that were red and yellow and hot pink, are worked into the pink majority, but the eye still knows they are there. Even more important, the knitter or weaver can select this yarn, and find that yellow, pink, hot pink, and reddish pinks, seem to magically match--because those colors are already hidden inside. The resulting product--some my yarn, and some commercial or other yarns they combine with it--looks better, more coordinated, more thoughfully compiled.
Back to spinning. And being amazed that the birds liked my greasy leftover slop stuff so much. Peace.