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Monday, December 29, 2025


 It’s a common question among spinners, fiber artists, and anyone new to working with fleece straight from the sheep. While clean, processed wool is completely safe to handle, raw wool can contain dirt, bacteria, manure, parasites, and agricultural residues that may cause skin irritation, respiratory issues, or illness if handled improperly. The good news is that getting sick from wool is rare, and with simple safety precautions, working with raw fleece can be both safe and enjoyable. 

The goal of this post isn’t to scare you—it’s to help you take simple precautions that make fleece handling safe and enjoyable.

Safety First: What You Need to Know When Working With Raw Wool

There’s something deeply satisfying about working with raw wool straight from the sheep. The lanolin, the texture, the connection to the animal—it’s a sensory experience that many fiber artists love. But raw wool is exactly that: raw. And like any natural agricultural product, it deserves to be handled with care.

Understanding a few basic safety practices will help you enjoy the process while protecting your health.

What’s in Raw Wool?

Raw fleece isn’t just fiber. It can also contain:

  • Dirt, dust, and plant matter

  • Grease (lanolin)

  • Manure and urine residues

  • Bacteria and fungi

  • External parasites (mites, lice, ticks)

  • Agricultural chemicals from pastures or sheep treatments

Most of these aren’t dangerous when handled properly—but ignoring them can lead to skin irritation, respiratory issues, or illness.  Especially if you have an underlying respiratory condition or poor immune system.  Also, just because alpaca fiber looks clean it is not, I assure you.

Potential Health Risks

While serious illness from handling raw wool is rare, there are some risks to be aware of:

  • Skin irritation or rashes from lanolin, bacteria, or residues

  • Respiratory irritation from dust, dander, and fine particles—especially when skirting or opening fleece

  • Bacterial exposure, including organisms found in manure

  • Allergic reactions, particularly in those sensitive to wool or animal dander

Smart Safety Practices for Handling Raw Wool

1. Work in a Well-Ventilated Area

Always process raw fleece in a space with good airflow. Outdoor spaces, garages, or well-ventilated studios are ideal. Avoid shaking or snapping fleece indoors where dust can linger.

2. Protect Your Hands

Wearing gloves—especially during skirting and washing—can prevent skin irritation and reduce exposure to bacteria. If you prefer bare hands, wash thoroughly with soap and warm water afterward.

3. Mind Your Lungs

If you’re sensitive to dust or working with very dirty fleece, consider wearing a dust mask or respirator while skirting. This is especially important if you have asthma or allergies.

4. Wash Hands (and Clothes) Afterward

Always wash your hands after handling raw wool, and avoid touching your face while working. It’s also a good idea to change clothes if you’ve been processing especially dirty fleece.

5. Keep Food and Drink Away

No snacking while skirting! Keep food, drinks, and kitchen tools far from raw wool to prevent cross-contamination.

6. Clean Your Tools and Surfaces

Tables, tubs, and tools should be cleaned after use. Raw wool should never be processed on surfaces used for food preparation.

Washing Wool Makes It Safe

Once wool is properly scoured—using hot water, appropriate detergent, and good technique—the risks drop dramatically. Clean wool is safe to card, spin, dye, and store without special precautions.

This is why proper washing isn’t just about beautiful fiber—it’s about health and safety too.

Respect the Fiber, Respect Yourself

Working with raw wool connects us to centuries of textile tradition, but those traditions also included smart, practical handling methods. A little awareness goes a long way.

With basic precautions, raw wool is safe, rewarding, and a joy to work with. Respect the fiber, respect the process, and most importantly—respect your own health.


Learn how to scour wool and wash alpaca properly with this 5-star rated book CLICK HERE to get one today, your health will thank you.












Wednesday, October 1, 2025

How to dye your own yarn and fiber

THE BOOK IS FINISHED!

Let's Dye Yarn and Fiber for beginners to advanced Step-by-Step guide with fun techniques with acid dyes and food-grade, safe to dye in the kitchen, dyes.



My new dye book, Let's Dye Yarn and Fiber is finally done!  It took a year to write. Why?  Deep researching, experimenting, dyeing, picture taking, editing, etc., take time.  But I have loved every minute of it!

My dyeing journey is extensive. I started dyeing about 15 years ago when I had a herd of 25 alpaca.  The only information about dyeing back in the day was to throw dye at fiber and wish for a happy accident. I mean, there was even a book that encouraged dyeing in your kitchen with acid dyes!  We now know better that this is not a good idea, at all.  Oh, and there was no mask wearing either. No bueno.

After failing so many times I realized there were some very important pieces missing, such as quality of water, temperature per a given dye, amount of dye per fiber weight, cook time, acid, etc.  So I went on a quest and researched published papers about dyeing and deeply in depth books on commercial dyeing.  Man were my eyes wide open!

After I put all the puzzle pieces together I was a success! And I mean a great success. Colors were vibrant, no more muddy color, no more bleeding fiber or felting. I could re-create colorways with no issues. There is something to the science of dyeing after all.

I put it all in this book. Every calculation, tip and trick that will also make you a dyeing success.

Where can you get it?

USA buyers can get it at Camaj Fiber Arts with free shipping.

Amazon has it for Canada, UK, The Netherlands and Australia.









As an extension to the book will be my soon released Yarn Dyeing Academy. Why? Because there are so many ways to dye yarn and fiber I would not fit them all in this book! Click the photo to sign up to be notified when it goes live.

Prepare to dye my friend.
Talk soon.

XO 
Mary Egbert