Best books about fibers according to redditors

We found 4 Reddit comments discussing the best books about fibers. We ranked the 4 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Fiber:

u/aquaventure · 3 pointsr/childfree

Spot on with everything...

...although in this modern era, where goats are recognized at giving nearly as much milk as a cow with half of the energy input, finding information on raising your own goats has never been easier!

u/l5m3s · 3 pointsr/crochet

I love the "Crocheter's Skill Building Workshop" by Dora Ohrenstein, combined with YouTube. I picked that book up at Joann's but it looks like Amazon has it as well!

u/kelseykeefe · 2 pointsr/weaving

Hello! Spam ate this.

I'm very silly with blankets.. I like textured weaves a lot for throws that need to be cozy and warm. On a 4 harness loom, a waffle weave is always nice or some variant of bronson lace, which can be gauzy and nice in a light blanket. I dunno, maybe I'm prematurely old; I really like texture... hahah.

Thinking back, I've done embarrassingly few weave structures on a 4 harness that call for a reliance of pattern/structure over color. I wanted to offer you this pinwheel structure as one of my favorites... but then I remembered it was for an eight harness loom (sorry). Most of my four harness exploration have been really texture based... I suppose that is a fault of mine. :x

For a reference book, do you have The Handweaver's Pattern Directory? It is awesome. Super recommend! Even just to keep around, because it's a great launching point for drafting your own patterns. Another basic point of reference I tend to keep tucked away is The Weaver's Companion is nice to keep around your bench, too, for random things one forgets while dressing the loom. Y'know, the math parts. ;)

u/root-node · 2 pointsr/sysadmin

You'll need this one at some point - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003AU7DTI