

Remember that dirty fleece we started with? It has now had its first cold water soak and is ready for STEP 2: WASHING First of all, you want your wash water VERY hot ~ to hot to put your hand in comfortably ~ mine is 160 degrees. (NOTE If needed, you can boil water on the stove and add to your tub to increase the temp. You can also fill a large stock pot with water; bring to the boil; shut the water off; add the soap then fleece; cover and let soak right on the stove. This works really well for mohair. The hard part to this is lifting the heavy pot when it comes time to change water!) Fill your container with this hot water and then be generous with the soap (use enough to color the water) Do not swish the soap around, you don't want lots of extra bubbles, just good soap and hot water. Cover your container somehow to help hold the heat in and then let the fleece soak in there for about 15 minutes (don't allow the water to cool much) Drain the water away, take your wool out and repeat this process (fill the container with hot water, then soap, then wool). You will probably need at least two, maybe three, washes. In this case, Daniel's fleece required two wash cycles.
Then comes STEP 3: RINSING No matter how many wash cycles I have put the wool through, I always do at least two rinses. Sometimes there are more rinses than washes, just to get all of the soap out! The first rinse water is as hot as the wash water and has a generous "glug" of white vinegar. I do have a water softener, but it just seems to help cut the soap to use the vinegar (maybe that is just my imagination though) Anyway, into the hot water and vinegar goes the fleece to soak for about 10 minutes. Drain, remove fleece, refill container with hot water (no vinegar this time) and rinse again without agitation for 10 minutes or so. Repeat if you are still getting soap bubbles in your rinse water.
STEP 4: I like to remove the excess water as much as I can. If the fleece is in my washing machine, I will spin it out with no water. For small batches, you can dedicate an old salad spinner to spinning wool ;) Now you will lay the clean fiber out somewhere to air dry. Its hard to wait, but you want it to be completely dry before you start processing it. You will notice that although the tips of this fleece remain slightly discolored, it looks nothing like the dirty tipped fiber it started out to be! It might be important to mention that because this fleece was coated, although it is dirty (sweat, lanolin, dirt and mud) it is NOT full of vm and chaff, so is relatively easy to get clean.
NEXT....PAGE 3: The next step in our wool washing tutorial!
Email me at serenityfarmswool@yahoo.com with any questions.
Washing Corriedale Wool...the way I do it...Page 2
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Remember the dirty fleece we started with?
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