Tag Archives: history of fiber

The Continuation of Wool

As we talked about last time, the earliest sheep ‘rooed’ their wool, so early farmers could collect the wool fibers easily. And the cleaning of the fibers makes the understanding that felt was an obvious first step on the way to using wool.

Shearing a sheep would not have been an easy task for the early herders. Stone tools were still being used when animals were being used for their wool. Tools made of stone are extremely sharp and using a scraping blade on a struggling sheep could easily lead to accidents for either the person or the animal. Scraping the wool off a hide alone would be much easier, but defeats the idea of harvesting from a sheep and keeping it alive.

We do have records of the Egyptians using bronze tools to shear sheep. As humans began working with iron, tools to shear animals were made with iron. These tools would make it far easier for people to clip the wool off their animals instead of combing it out or collecting it when it fell.

Next time, we’ll talk about the other animal fiber, silk.

The Start of Wool

It’s hard for me to comprehend that for millennia, humans used either fur or leather, or plant based fiber. Animal based fiber came later in our history, with the domestication of animals. Wool and silk seem like such basic fibers it’s hard for me to believe they are relatively modern.

While sheep were domesticated around 13-11,000 years ago, they were used for their milk, meat and skins. They weren’t used for their wool until 8 thousand years ago. The earliest woven sheep wool garments are from 6-5000 years ago. The earliest woven plant based textile evidence dates to about 34 thousand years ago. Goats were domesticated even later than sheep, and their wool less selected for.

Llamas and Alpacas were domesticated even later than sheep and goats, but followed the same trajectory of being used for meat, skins, and milk for a millennium or two before people started to use their wool. It’s believed that instead of cutting off the whole fleece in one go, early shepherds would comb their animals hair and use that for spinning and weaving. This is extremely believable. But it’s also possible that they simply picked up the wool.

Very old breeds of sheep do not shed over the course of the year, as many other animals and modern sheep do. They ‘roo’, which means as the weather gets hotter, they shed their entire coat in sheets, much like a snake sheds its skin.

As we’ve already seen, spinning and weaving took an extremely long time to make fabric. A large hunk of sheep wool, messy and clumpy and dirty, could easily become felt, especially since the wool would probably be cleaned after being collected off the sheep. Working wool while cleaning it would mat the wool into itself and form a dense thick cloth. This would save so much time from having to spin and weave the wool and would create a dense warm and water resistant material for shoes, outerwear and bedding.

More on animal fibers later.