Our yarn has come a long way from its original state as scoured wool. The construction is now complete and only a few finishing touches remain. The yarn must now be removed from the bobbins in 50-gram (140 yard) increments to create individual skeins. The skeining machine (which unfortunately eluded my camera) is set for a certain number of rotations (pre-measured based on that specific yarn’s yards-per-gram ratio) which wind off consistent, exact amounts for each skein.
The 50-gram skeins are placed in a plastic lined box and sent along for a final wash. In order to remove residual spinning grease as well as ‘block’ the finished yarn (e.g. brainwash the wool to its new identity), it is important that each skein is washed before it leaves the mill. Equipment-wise, the washing method is no different than running a load at your own home. All finished yarns are gently washed in (packed-to-the-gills) regular-sized domestic washing machines. The difference between a washed and an unwashed skein of milled wool can be rather astounding. In the case of woolen yarns it seems to transform the weight significantly as the fibers relax and fully bloom.
After a trip through the washing machine, the skeins are hung evenly along a wall of drying racks. Here they they will sway in front of a brigade of rotating fans which speed drying-time remarkably (I use this same trick at home when wet-blocking garments).


The drying wall is enough to make most of us yarn-folk woozy with delight. All that lofty wool swaying gently in the breeze… to say nothing of the sweet, sweet wool fumes wafting through the air.
When the wool is completely dry, it is hand-twisted into hank form and whisked off towards the labeling station.
Lucy (The Saint) labels each and every skein by hand, making sure each one is properly placed and affixed with an adhesive tag that designates a specific skein’s color name and lot number.
When the yarn looks like this, it is ready for its entrance into the Wide World. Each labeled skein is bagged (10 skeins together, organized by color), loaded into freight boxes, and finally shipped to our warehouse in Portland, Maine. The warehouse is one of our team’s nerve-centers: from here we fulfill online orders and ship larger amounts to Flagship stores. Each yarn’s story beyond this point is different, and we hope they bring tactile pleasures to knitting hands wherever they end up.
I hope you’ve enjoyed getting a taste of what happens behind the scenes to create and spin Shelter. As I mentioned in my first post, such a magical process deserves to be shared. This experience may even inspire you to seek out a mill and witness this magic in person. In my own experience with mills in both America and Europe, owners and employees are generally very proud of their work and love to share that joy, either through tours or a general eagerness to discuss yarn making. My wish is that we begin to see more US production being done in support of our own mills, before they’re gone. Thanks for joining me!
One way to get more U.S. production is to encourage our congressmen to introduce and sign laws that support domestic production of yarn. Right now, there aren’t many incentives, tax-wise, for anybody to start any kind of business. This needs to change. Otherwise, it’s great to see new yarns (and one that’s in my app but not my stash yet) enter the Wide World.
Thanks for the tour and making your yarn in the US!
Thanks for this wonderful and inspiring series.
This has been fascinating. Thank you for taking us on this journey.
Thank you for the time and energy you put into this series of articles. I have been following it each day and have really enjoyed it.
All the best to you,
Cheryl
thank you for this tour. i very seriously doubt i would ever get to take advantage of a real live tour, so this has been very interesting to me. your photography is so good. i just purchased my first skein of Shelter online from Hill Country Weavers (closest place to Oklahoma City) and i cannot believe how lightweight it feels! Thanks again!
Thank you Jared. Your posts and photography are always inspirational to me but this series has inspired me in another way. I don’t live far from Harrisville so my husband and I are planning to take our boys for a tour some time soon. Maybe I’ll call and ask them to let me know when they’re spinning Shelter!
Jared — thank you for this wonderful tour. My great-great-grandfather started a woolen mill outside Philadelphia. Most of those mills are sadly gone and I’m so glad someone’s interested enough to try and perk the industry up a bit!
Jared, enjoyed meeting you last fall! I’m so lucky to have this resource in my backyard, and don’t make enough of it! Hope to see you in Harrisville in October…
SWOON!!
I’m all wobbly in the knees now after looking at and reading about all that yarny-goodness!
Thanks for the magic, Jared…
thanks you so much for your wonderful tour. your photos are gorgeous! you should publish a book! just awesome!!!
At a time when U.S. manufacturing is struggling, it is Great to see a yarn made in America. I am saving up my pennies for a couple of skeins..
Thank you for this Made In America tour! I love Shelter yarn and will be actively supporting those yarns made right here!
Thank you so much for the virtual mill tour, Jared!
I’m going to have to give Harrsville a call and see if they give tours to the general public. Ooh, and GMS, too. I’d love to visit a local mill in person.
Its always so enjoyable to se yarn beeing born. Thanks for the trip.
My HB bought me some shelter for my birtday, I really enjoyd knitting it. A wery special, different yarn!
This was a very interesting series…and the yarn is great. I am knitting a Romney Kerchief with Long Johns and I love it!
Great series, and of course your photos are wonderful. What a great idea to do this, makes one appreciate what goes into making the yarn you buy. And inspired me to purchase my second order of Shelter, from your online store. Thanks, Jared.
Thanks! Fantastic post!!
Thank you very much for the tour and Thank You for making your yarn in the USA
I so enjoyed your virtual tour through the yarn making process. I agree with supporting our mills by buying their wonderful products. It’s a win/win deal.
This is awesome, I was just asking my wool store if their was a mill in NZ that I could visit. Now I have seen yours I definitely need to go.
Thanks for the insight, and congrats on shelter.
A great article series! I really enjoyed reading it, and of course, the color in your photographs continues to astound.
I had been saving this series of Mill Posts until I had time to sit and read slowly and savor. Just finished them and they were great! Jared, thanks so much for sharing this delightful information. It would have been interesting to know no matter what, but because they were photographed at this lovely mill and were the backstory to your lovely Shelter yarn, the pieces were that much more special. And, as always, your photos are incredible.
Many many thanks!!
Teri
Thank you for such a great article and photography. You simplified the whole process, but I’m very sure that it took hours and hours to get just the right colours blended. It’s wonderful to learn about the process, and I now have a greater appreciation of the finished product. I think Shelter looks wonderful, and I hope to be able to get some here in Canada.
I so enjoyed this tour of the mill and the yarn production process. I love heathered yarns and do a little hand spinning myself. I knitted a Christmas gift scarf with Shelter and the recipient loved it. Knowing the story of our stuff makes it so much more interesting.
Thanks for the tour.
Thank you for the tour of this American mill. It is heartening to know that this historic part of the yarn industry has been preserved, and that the Shelter we receive has been touched by human hands. Let us know if you ever decide to host a retreat in the area (complete with classes and a tour of the mill). I’ll be the first to sign up.
I completely enjoyed a behind the scenes look at Shelter. I learned a lot (roping vs roving, for example) and savored each photo. Thank you!
Jared, I was already one of your many admirers, but this story has made me a true fan. I really want to get my hands on this yarn! The nearest store to carry it is 2 hours away, but I have a trip planned. Just the pictures of the drying wall are making me woozy- I can’t imagine what it must be like to be there!
I also can’t imagine what mixture of pride and humility you must be feeling- to be the visionary of such a beautiful and true yarn- and at the same time to be a small part (ok, not that small) of the process of bringing your vision to reality. So Cool! Thanks for sharing the process. Knitters and yarn lovers everywhere are richer for it!
thank you jared for your inspirational work and thank you for sharing. makes me want to start producing wool “made in austria”!
[...] highly recommend his recent 5-part blog “tour” of the yarn making facility to give you a nice overview of how much work it takes to create a lofty, [...]
[...] terms of where we get our yarn, how it is made and where it is made – Jared Flood published a series of blog entries detailing the process of making the Shelter yarn at the mill in Maine and books like Knit Local [...]
Oh my gosh! I just got introduced to this blog via “Frolic” and had to go down to the beginning (kind of backwards-sounding, eh? – yes, I’m Canadian!).
What a most wonderful read. I now wish I were a fabulous knitter (instead of someone who occasionally knits dishrags!!!) I once attempted a sweater and pretty much had it finished… but my son had by then grown by two sizes! Guess you could say I’m not the most experience and dedicated knitter.
Thanks for sharing the whole process!