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How to Use the Wild Carder

Clamp your Wild Carder to a bench or table.

Fleece

 - We recommend you lightly wash your fleece prior to 

carding. Tease the tips of the staples with a flick carder, pull 
the staple apart sideways, place on the feed-in tray and turn 
the handle clockwise. Card small amounts of fibre at a time.

Prepared fibre

 - Peel sliver into strips, stretch to lengthen 

and spread it out sideways. Place on the feed-in tray and turn 
handle clockwise.

NOTE:

 For easy carding spread out your fibre as you place on 

the feed-in tray.

Wild carding

 - Prepare short pieces of fibre, fabric, ribbon, 

feathers, noils, cocoons, paper etc. As you card your fibre, add 
the embellishments to your fibre on the feed-in tray.

Adjust the packer brush to pack the fibres down into the teeth 
of the large drum.
Once the teeth on the large drum are full of fibre or fibre starts 
accumulating on the small drum, stop carding.

NOTE:

 Ensure all fibres remain between the guide pegs on the 

feed-in tray. This will avoid fibres being caught around the 
shafts.

Removing the batt

Loosen the knob holding the packer brush and twist it up off 
the large drum. Turn the drum until the doffer strip is to the 
top.

Part the batt with the doffer, taking care the doffer runs in the 
groove in the doffer strip.

Pull the batt down over the back beam to remove it cleanly 
from the drum.

Maintenance

Apply a drop of oil occasionally to all bearings.
The gap between the teeth may be adjusted to suit your fibre. 
The carder comes factory set at our recommended spacing 
of  0-1mm. For fine fibres without bulk, you may use a closer 
setting or for coarser bulky fibres you may use a slightly wider 
setting. To adjust the gap, remove the drive band. Loosen 
the 2 bolts and use the nail supplied to rotate the 2 eccentric 
bearings. Tighten the 2 bolts and replace the drive band. 
Always remove the drive band when not in use to avoid it 
stretching.

For more detailed carding instructions, hints and inspiration, 
we recommended the Ashford Book of Carding by Jo Reeve.
It has 92 colourful pages covering flick, hand and drum 
carding, colour theory and 4 gorgeous projects.

Happy Carding!

WDC05082010V3

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