probably by using a form of drop spindle. ie a weight on a stick. This is still a fun way to spin.
You spin it on a spinning wheel to get a ball of wool, which you can use to string amulets and necklaces.
Wool. You can get wool from shearing sheep and then going to a spinning wheel and spin the wool into a ball of wool.
It doesn't ! The spinning wheel turns raw wool fibres into cotton yarn. The person operating it does all the work. The spinning wheel simply provides a mechanism to twist the teased wool fibres into yarn as the operator 'feeds' it. Cotton yarn is woven into fabric on a loom.
Shear a sheep for wool, then to spin it locate a spinning wheel and use one piece on it, right-click the ball of wool icon, then click X, then type 28 and press enter to spin a full inventory.
A spinning wheel.
Molly Duncan has written: 'Spin your wool and dye it and weave it' 'Spin, dye & weave your own wool' -- subject(s): Dyes and dyeing, Hand spinning, Hand weaving, Wool
I am assuming that what you are talking about is the quest where you have to get BLACK balls of wool and give it to the farmer. You get black balls of wool by shearing the black sheep, then spinning the wool on the spinning wheel.
The original Spinning jenny could spin eight spindles of yarn at a time, but as technology improved the most advanced Spinning jenny could spin one hundred twenty spindles at a time!
You can make cloth by ball of wool by, Going to a loom to weave it. Only loom I know is in Draynor Manor next to cabbage port in the farmhouse. You would need 4 balls of wool to make strip of cloth. *MEMBERS ONLY*
in lumbridge castle the second floor
I am linking a great video below showing this! Click to watch it. Basically, a distaff holds your wool so you have it readily available for spinning. Wrap your unspun wool around the distaff and gradually pull it off and spin it. The modern distaff for hand spinning is one you loop around your wrist, which holds the wool in a very easy position to spin.
A spinning mill was a common workplace during the American Industrial Revolution that proccesses fiber (wool, cotton, flax, etc.) into yarn by the use of mechanized spinning machines. these machines replaced the traditional spinning wheel due to its productivity, being able to spin multiple yarns at once. Some mills are still in operation today, some dating back to the industrial revolution. Fiber artists and farmers can send their wool or fiber to mills for processing, though most is now done overseas.