Wool Hall
Looms, spinning wheels, and fiber tools, weighed by what they actually cost you to live with: the footprint they take, the warp they hold, and the prices the used market really charges.
What this is
In the old wool towns, the hall was the building where cloth was weighed and judged before it could be sold. That is the job here, turned on the equipment that makes the cloth: rigid heddle and floor looms, spinning wheels and e-spinners, carders, swifts, and the used market where good looms go looking for second owners. Each one is measured by what it actually costs to live with, the footprint it takes, the warp width it holds, the parts that wear, and the prices the used market really charges, with a plain answer on when the smaller loom or the older wheel is the better call.
Specs and prices are checked against the makers' own pages and dated in each article. Spot something off? The contact page is the way to flag it, and fixes are noted where they're made.
Who writes this
The Wool Hall Team. Looms, wheels, and fiber tools for weavers and spinners, weighed by what each one costs to live with from warping to woven cloth.