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Sneak Peek: Spring 2025 – Hue!

You may have already received your digital or print copy of the Spring 2025 Hue issue! We aren’t going to lie – we got caught up in staring at all the pretty colors, so this is less of a preview and more of a post-view, since you might already have it in your hands. Still, we wanted to share about it! 

This issue marks an important milestone for PLY:  it’s the first issue produced by our new editor in chief, Karen Robinson. Love the cover? You can thank Karen! Karen has been with PLY for more than a decade, working her magic behind the scenes. Now it is her time to shine! Don’t worry, Jacey isn’t going away. She is stepping up to produce both PLY and WEFT magazines and the PLY Spinners Guild, huge jobs for her as well! 

Are you a fan of natural color? Lee Langstaff, the co-chair of the Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival, gives us a taste of color genetics. She has spent over twenty years developing a full range of natural colors in her own flock at Shepherd’s Hey Farm and knows a thing or two about what makes a great fleece.  

Charan Sachar, who specializes in art yarn and fiber-inspired pottery, shares an experiment with color and texture. With the same dye colors and the same structure, he creates several different yarns which each have a different look and feel. These yarns are simply to dye for.

Jessie McKitrick gives us an article about choosing colors for Fair Isle knitting and shares a beautiful pattern called Spring Bloom Mitts.   

And there is so much more, but we don’t want to spoil it for you!   

If by some strange occurrence (maybe Mercury was in retrograde, we don’t know) you haven’t ordered your issue, you can buy it here.

Sneak Peek: The Winter 2024 Issue!

The PLY Winter 2024 issue is set to be released early next month, and we are so excited about this issue because the topic is Care!

Let me tell you, this issue is PACKED. Sustainability, ergonomics, textile conservation, tool upkeep… We’ve got it this quarter!

Just a few highlights:

Andrea Peart tells us about dealing with wool sensitivities and how she has handled being a handspinner in a world where Merino is king.

Maggie Casey shows us all about caring for our spinning wheels and talks about how innovation has changed the way we care for wheels!

Anne Choi delves deep into the history of Korean textiles, a history that is rife with cultural erasure and contemporary disregard.

Natasha Sills of Gritty Knits tells us how she has learned to turn her brain off and take a break while carding to help her manage her arthritis.

And there is so, so much more!

We hope you’re as excited for this issue as we are! Be sure to subscribe (or renew your subscription) by the end of the month to make sure you don’t miss out on this issue!