• F3
  • F2
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  • F4

This three-day course introduces hand spinning as both a practical craft and a form of embodied knowledge. Participants work hands-on with fibres and spinning tools while also engaging with questions of labour, sustainability, and the role of handmade processes in contemporary life. Each day combines demonstration, guided practice, independent experimentation, and short reflective activities.A postcard from early 19th century Spain, showing a woman handspinning with a distaff and a drop spindle,TRC.2020.4383A postcard from early 19th century Spain, showing a woman handspinning with a distaff and a drop spindle,TRC.2020.4383

The course will be taught by Akash Kumar. Akash Kumar is an artist, researcher, and educator working at the intersection of material culture, with a focus on textiles, folklore, storytelling, and the transmission of knowledge. Rooted in hands-on making as both a method of inquiry and a medium for cultural exploration, his practice examines how and what skills, traditions, and wisdom are passed down across generations.

  • 26th of August - Session 1 — Foundations of Hand Spinning
    Focus: fibre basics, twist introduction, and spindle techniques
    • Short history of the spindle, charkha, great wheel, and treadle wheel, including
      Gandhi’s use of spinning as non-violent resistance.
    • Introduction to local fibres (wool, linen, alpaca) and tools (takli, charkha, carders)
    • Hands-on fibre prep: carding and pre-drafting
    • Drafting by hand and inserting twist with a spindle or petite charkha
    • Mini-lesson on twist structure (S-twist vs. Z-twist)
    • Students spin small samples of each twist type
    • End-of-day reflection: sensations of material, patience, skill, and surprise.
  • 9th of September - Session 2 — Technique, Tools & Yarn Metrics
    Focus: tool comparison, fibre properties, measurement skills
    • Shared reflections from Day 1
    • Rotations through the drop spindle, charkha, and treadle wheel
    • Fibre comparison: cotton, wool, blends, staple length differences
    • Practice plying: creating a balanced two-ply yarn
      • Homework:
        Spin, spin and spin. Write a short reflection on differences in tools and fibres
  • 23rd of September - Session 3 — Creative Spinning & Custom Yarn
    Focus: design, experimentation, and finishing techniques
    • Warm-up spinning
    • Design session: creating custom blends with coloured cotton, wool, linen, alpaca,
    • and optional textural additions (seeds, slubs, etc.)
    • Spinning 50–150 m of custom yarn; optional plying
    • Finishing: skeining and steam-setting twist
    • Labelling yarn with fibre content, twist type, and measurements
    • Final group discussion: skill growth, slow craft, labour, sustainability, and the
      relevance of hand spinning today
    • Final reflection: connecting personal experience to ideas of craft and modern
      technology

The course is given on three Wednesdays, the 26th of August, the 9th of September and the 23rd of September, from 10.00-13.00.

Please note that, in order to really learn the technique and obtain results, this course does involve some homework. The participants will be finishing techniques and projects, started during the meetings, at home. This will take about an hour, no more than three hours.Akash Kumar amongst spinning equipmentAkash Kumar amongst spinning equipment

  • Venue: TRC Leiden, Boerhaavelaan 6, 2334 EN, Leiden.
  • Teacher: Akash Kumar
  • Language: English
  • Costs: 135 euros per three lessons. Coffee/tea/threads are provided. All necessary materials will be provided
  • Maximum number of participants: 8. Minimum: 4. If the minimum number of participants is reached, confirmation and invoices shall be sent.

Please contact us to register: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.


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Contact

Boerhaavelaan 6
2334 EN Leiden.
Tel. +31 (0)6 28830428  
office@trcleiden.org 

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Bank account number

NL39 INGB 0002 9823 59, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre.

TRC closed until 4 May 2026

The TRC is closed to the public until Monday, 4 May 2026, due to our move to the Boerhaavelaan. The TRC remains in contact via the web, telephone and email. For direct contact and personal visits, please contact the TRC at office@trcleiden.org, or by mobile, 06-28830428.

Donations

The TRC is dependent on project support and individual donations. All of our work is being carried out by volunteers. To support the TRC activities, we therefore welcome your financial assistance: donations can be transferred to bank account number (IBAN) NL39 INGB 000 298 2359, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre. BIC code is: INGBNL2A.

 You can also, very simply, if you have an iDEAL app, use the iDEAL button and fill in the amount of support you want to donate: 
 

 

 

Since the TRC is officially recognised as a non-profit making cultural institution (ANBI), donations are tax deductible for 125% for individuals, and 150% for commercial companies. For more information, click here