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Friday, July 25, 2008

Angora Yarn Sweater - An Eternal Halo

Additionally there are also some companies that are offering custom made fluffy angora sweaters to those who are willing to pay the price of having yarn hand spun for making them. These hand made sweaters are so elegant and quite useful in northern climates due to the warmth that they offer combined with their lightness and weather resistant qualities and furry fluffy looks. An angora sweater custom made with angora fibers from Chilean rabbits, and handspun yarn, once in your family will be cherished for generations.

Angora Yarn Sweater - An Eternal Halo

Historical records show that the French royalty was so fond of angora wool that it began its own angora wool collection. This was done to ensure that there was sufficient angora wool for knitting royal clothing. This practice led to the naming of a breed of angora rabbits as French Angora Rabbits.

Yarns of different varieties are available for making knitwear. Angora yarn is considered among the finest yarn available for knitwear and sweaters. Angora wool comes from the eponymous breed of rabbits. This breed has several strands. It is widely accepted that this breed of rabbits originated in some Turkish town. Sheep's wool is more popular than angora wool but angora wool is considered more elegant and beautiful.

There are a few different types of rabbit breed that are prevalent today. There are rabbits breed in Turkey, England, France, Germany and Chile. These five main types of wool all have different attributes and characteristics that separate them from amongst themselves. The Chilean version is said to be the largest of them all and is a very widely sought after wool for hand spinning.

The color, feel, and softness of yarns that are made of wool is what makes angora yarn knitwear and sweaters elegant and in high demand by royalty everywhere. The wool is much warmer than regular sheep's wool, while also being finer and more resistant to stains. Depending on how the wool is spun, the yarn can appear very fluffy and even resemble fur without having to kill any rabbit. The look of the hand spun angora yarn makes it great for making knitwear including sweaters, and jackets.



Learning Guitar - Speed Comes Naturally

The physical application is quick but, to the ear, the theoretical application gets tired quick.

Learning Guitar - Speed Comes Naturally

Let me give an example. Take the basic major scale in its "boxed" position. Someone devoted completely to speed playing may learn to pick this pure scale up and down, using a metronome to gradually speed up until they reach a speed where each note in the scale begins to blur with the next (as the human brain struggles to separate the notes amidst the speed). It has a "rollar coaster" effect, and can sound impressive to the untrained ear. However, all this guitarist is doing is playing the scale's natural interval sequence of notes, from 1 - 7, then back down again. Just very fast of course.

To non-guitarists, hearing a blazingly quick solo is just good entertainment. The focus often turns away from the intricacies of the composition towards the more aesthetic, virtuoso effects of playing guitar fast. To guitarists, who have been playing for some time at least, speed is often seen as the icing on the cake, which can seem overwhelming as an addition to the already complex theory that goes into composition.

This guitarist has prioritised speed over learning how to really use the different intervals of the scale expressively. The latter requires exploration and understanding of the fretboard, using the mind just as much as the fingers. This guitarist will soon find out that playing quick is not so easy when you're not doing a mere "straight run" of scales and arpeggios.

It's no mistake that the most respected guitarists the world has known are sooner noted for their harmonic charisma and melodic expression, than their mere use of speed. Of course, occasional bursts of speed can compliment the piece rhythmically, but it has to be used in context. Speed is like any other playing quality you develop with guitar - you must choose when is creatively appropriate to use it.

Use it wisely.

If you get too bogged down with learning to play fast, the speed element will inevitably end up being used (or more accurately, abused) to cover up your lack of melodic exploration. It will be too tempting to see it as an easy road to impressing the casual listener, rather than feeling satisfied with your personal interpretation of scales and their variations.

That is why speed should be put to the back of your mind when learning to really navigate scales and arpeggios in your own personal way. What you'll find is, as your playing develops, moments of speed playing will leap out at you. You'll feel exactly when a faster tempo will compliment your music rather than feel it must be the sole purpose of your music. Even when soloing in heavy metal!

So get your priorities straight. Don't let the mesmorising blur of virtuoso guitar playing make you feel like you're lagging behind. One day, given the right focus during your practice sessions, you'll be able to use speed as just another textural effect in your music, along with the hammer-on, slide, tap, bend etc.

You can become jealous of other guitarists' ability to play fast and, as a result, attempt to focus all your time on speed, sacrificing solid theory time for more physically orientated drills. Or, you can accept that speed is something that develops naturally from the solid foundations of theoretical fretboard knowledge and confidence.