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Hello friends welcome to soulful spinning this is a channel about knitting spinning and all the Fiber Arts my name is Lisa and I'm coming to you from the Midwest just outside of Chicago today is the 31st of May 2024 and I'm here to give you an update on some of my knitting and spinning projects I hope this finds you well I hope your season is going well mine's going pretty well we've got our garden in and we are ready ready for the warm weather actually pulled out a garment that I made for the warm weather just this afternoon this is a linen uh cardigan made um it's made out of Quint and& company kestral it's a it's a worsted weight yarn and the pattern is called quicksand by Heidi kermier and I really don't wear it that often um it's one of these open front Cardigans with no uh buttons and uh it's a bit long on me um the linen did did it kind of drags down quite a bit um I thought maybe I could make it a little bit shorter and make it a little bit more wearable but I thought I would just put on today because my big project I'm going to talk about today is another cardigan so since I last spoke to you about two weeks ago I have been hard at work on this so this is my Mabel cardigan by is Isabelle Kramer he's a wonderful designer it's knit out of durum NATA uliss it's a sport weight yarn I'm knitting it on a three and 3.25 mm needle which is a us3 and I am finally done with the body I'm going to try it on for you um it's got a similar fit uh to this one that I'm wearing here so I'll show you how it's fitting so far I just cast this off yesterday um after an interminable um one by one rib so so I'm knitting the third size and it's got this beautiful shoulder detail it's all knit in one piece um it's contiguous sleeve construction and it's got a pretty stitch pattern kind of looks like a cable running up the sides and then also uh it mirrors that along the under the arm here so let me see if I can move back a little bit you can see more of it so yeah it it comes about here right at the middle of my hip and it's uh again it's an open front open front card again I think it's hopefully it's going to block out uh just a little bit bigger cuz I it's it's definitely fitted you know a fitted garment I was here last time I spoke with you a couple weeks ago I was right here I put a stitch marker so I knit all of this did the ribbing I just did a regular standard bind off in pattern and so now all I have to do is knit the sleeves so i' I ran into a little snafu another Knitter on rivalry made this sweater and she made it I think a couple sizes bigger than I did and she only used seven balls of this yarn so I figured seven should be enough to make a size three but as you can see I'm ready to do the sleeves and all I have left are two balls and this little bit of extra so here's the yarn so it's a lure blue 100% wool I think it's a blend of Portuguese and French Marino uh it's very very soft very velvety hand uh it's a Woolen spun so it's it holds a lot of air and it's very very light so I have only two balls and I was reading that your sleeves take about 30% of your total yarn so I'm a little worried that I'm going to run out so I think I'm going to place an order for just um a couple extra and if I have extra I'm thinking of making a hat um there's a couple of Berets that I have in my rivalry Library there's one by um uh what is her name now I forget her name the same Eerie shitu has a real cute beret pattern and I thought I would enter that into Isabelle's um matchy matchy Cal that she's got going on in her channel so uh I'll put her link uh down below her YouTube channel and her rivalry group so she's doing a year-long knitalong where you knit something that matches so um often you know you often have extra yarn over left over from your project so I'm going to make a hat to go with this card again so yeah I'm really uh very happy with it I've been really really monogamous and it's been really hard but um I'm trying to have better follow-through on a lot of my projects so all right that's really all the knitting I've been working on uh I've knit a few rows on my on my Shaw here so I've knit a couple of rows on this pattern this is the yira shaw by um same designer Erie shitu so I'm uh I think I'm going to knitting this for a friend and uh yeah so it's kind of like an in between project so now I have to uh pick up all my sleeve stitches and knit the sleeves and I have long arms too so I think getting a few extra a couple extra balls of yarn is probably a good idea all right so last week I I showed you what I considered an epic fail I showed this jumper that I made from Icelandic wool yeah it's the skola Fel jumper I think it's by Diana Walla and I tried it on and I got so many I got a lot of good feedback um lots of suggestions on how I might Salvage this garment it's uh it's quite large that's that's the issue it's quite large quite long and so before I take it apart which I really do not want to do because it's this sticky Icelandic wool I'm going to take the suggestion of several of my viewers who told me that I should Reit RIT the neck uh the neck is quite open and gapy and so I'm going to undo the cast on here cast off here and I'm think I'm going to rip it back to where I picked up the stitches and I believe I went down two needle sizes for the neck I think I went down to a us6 or a 4mm needle uh so I'm going to do that again but I'm going to do some more rapid decreases and create sort of a a funnel neck for the Garment so it would raise it up a little bit and as somebody said this would be great over a turtleneck in the fall when you're walking your dog so I'm going to try to salvage it it might be cute with a pair of leggings um you know black leggings or before I take it apart so it's kind of in a I'm thinking about a pile uh spring now it's quite warm so but I did find my leftovers just this afternoon and uh thanks again everybody for your um feedback and your suggestions uh regarding this this sweater of mine uh I really appreciate all your feedback uh speaking of uh last time I spoke with you I mentioned that we've revived our rivalry group so the Rivalry group is Soulful spinners and since the last I recorded we're up 100 members I think we have uh 650 about members with a small group uh we're running a uh very informal tour to fleece which is a massive spinal where Knitters spin along with the writers of the tour to France and so we've got a thread there going and um yeah we're just we're just having a nice companionable chat over there uh tell us what you're working on if you want want to just join us for an informal spinal we'd love to have you uh and I'll link that in the description below this video [Music] [Music] so what else have I been working on so last time I recorded I was plying up some uh a sweater spin I've got about 50% of my uh of a sweater spin spun up and I'll show you what the skaines are looking like here so these are three Hanks of black Welsh Mountain that I plied up on my um e spinner and I I purchased 600 grams of this fiber uh for a sweater I want to make I want to make this sweater another um Isabelle Cramer pattern Call's sweater so I've got these three Hanks so far and I've got lots more to spin so um I'm hoping this afternoon I can get back on my wheel um I've saved the control card so I'll just keep spinning it along and hopefully I'll have this I would like to get this all spun up before the spin along so I can sort of have a clear clear bobbins on my on my wheel so i' I've got SP as usual I've spindles and all kinds of stuff over here all right so here is my my swatch for that garment you can see it's got this slip stitch ribbing and uh as I'm spinning I'm winding off the bobbins onto these um temporary bobbins and then just sort of randomly mixing up the bobbins as I do a tly so that is going along pretty well and um I'm excited about um a hand cardigan which I haven't made yet so so that's what's been going on with my wheel [Music] spinning I'm like those are future customers those are future customers because you know what that's how you how many people like people start spinning and they you know they got the comb top and everything and then they get real wool like you know real wool minimally processed and then they put their hands in a fleece oh yeah and then they're goners [Music] so last time I uh was speaking with you I mentioned that I was going to a small fiber event in my area it was the Ilana Fiber Festival and it was a very small uh small Festival in Crown Point Indiana and my husband and I took a drive over there and I came away with two Treasures it wasn't a really uh fiber oriented Festival it was more a lot of handdyed yarn and people were selling project bags Etc but I saw this lady uh sitting there uh and her and her partner and she was spinning on a spindle that looks just like this so this is a Blackfoot spindle and this one's got a really neat little uh design a spiral design and it's an inhand spindle uh I have some footage of here I think the lady's name was Judy or Judith and uh she gave me permission to film her a little bit and she explains um a little bit of the Traditions with the black Blackfoot uh Nation and they spinning and they did all this inhand spinning and I have tried um I've tried to do it um with very little success but it's essentially uh an off- the tip uh kind of spinning that you toot completely in hand and of course uh she was holding the spindle in her right hand and TW twirling so I just thought this was really cool of course I went home and I started spinning it like this uh using it as a uh support spindle which I think you could totally do so I found a couple articles about this tradition and I will link them uh below if you're interested but I thought that was really very it's a very sort of uh rustic uh spindle and she also had some beautiful fiber and of course I couldn't walk away without some Fiber and this is what I bought so they're 4 o each 4 ounces each and I couldn't believe it when I read the tag this is Navajo churro wool and it's uh surprisingly soft so Navajo churro is not known for its softness it's a it's a primitive breed and it's used uh for weaving mostly but uh she well I'll let her tell the story um she has a small flock and it's part of a um conservation effort to maintain the breed and I'll give you a little information about Navajo churo here in just a second but it's a surprisingly soft so I bought a gray and I bought a white and I think I'm going to spin these uh into a thick single and make um uh probably a hat and a mitten set if if I have enough uh it's 8 oz um she said it was from the body of the animal so I think the Navajo churro have a wide variety of of fibers on them as a lot of the Primitive breeds do let me see if I have her tag here yeah here it is uh her name is Judy meyerhofer and I'll put her information below and that was really the highlight of the whole uh Festival is uh chatting with her and learning about uh a little bit about the traditions of the Blackfoot uh spinning she learned at the at the knee of her grandmother and it was a really really lovely story so I'll insert some video here of her telling the story and I'll be back in just a second to talk a little bit more about Navajo chural I want to watch your spin now do you mind if I I W film you a little bit yeah this is the black foot spinning my grandmother was black this is I yeah why and look how much yarn you've already it's very portable they used to do it walking and on so you just do a half hitch I do a half hitch she did a wrap she used to W me in the back of the head for doing the half she said I was lazy but if you drop it the half just catches right so is there a notch on the edge there and then you he puts a notch here that was his addition to it yeah just to make yeah have to pick one up yeah and then you just twirl and then you fall off the hook the TI and then when you feel the twist hit your finger you stop it and drag and then wrap it on to the and when you feel the point temporary cop like a temporary yeah so you're you're building up all the twists Park and d and then you're drafting it in yeah so I feel the twist with my finger I stop and dra which gives you all the time in the world to dra unlike a drop spindle which you're worried about it to start I yeah that's a great way very it's a great way for a new new person to learn too twist it till it hits your finger now put it between your knees you got two hands to do your draft and this is the way she taught me how to spin when I was a little girl now she was living in the late 1800s early 1900s and they spun Buffalo or American Bison she also was the town healer or the village healer and at a certain point the black foot were not able to stop the white man from killing off the Buffalo so they held a huge ceremony and they told all the women that they had to burn their spindles and burn their Loom Parts because they had not been able to stop the white man my grandmother said no she was had other sources of fiber she was not going to burn the spindle if you go to Browning Montana right now and talk about black foot spinning I will tell you the black foot did not spin and did not leave my grandmother said no they told her that that Dutch man that had been following the tribe around and asking for her hand in marriage could have her so she married him and moved down to Southern Ohio with her spindles andom parts now the Blackfoot woman when she has raised her children she will look around for someone in her neighborhood or in her family that reminds her of herself and she will take that girl or boy and she will teach that assistant everything that she does everything she likes what her belief systems are and used to be when that person became accepted as an adult the tribe they would take her name so the genealogical records are really a mess yeah I bet my grandma just picked me out all the grandchildren neighbors I reminded her of her and my father agreed so she taught me now the black foot spinning is done is what's called a paring meaning that you get a spin on the yarn when you feel the spin touch your finger you stop and you draft the yarn out of the wall now with beginners I have them hold it between their knees and then they got to do their drafting they did this on they did this while they were walking and then they use a frame Loom to make blankets now Buffalo wool the undercoat is totally nonallergic there is no one who is allergic to B and so they would wrap the babies in these blankets and then they could put a skin around it or whatever they wanted and the baby's Ted skin would not react because of the Buffalo there's a few other people that were taught by their grandparents how to spin black but we're very few and far between now Spin Off magazine I think it's 2016 issue one of the students that I taught when has an article look at thatn really good so yeah I it was worth a trip just talking to her so I I ran over to my public library and I take this book out every now and then it's Clara Park's book of wool which was really my entry point in breed Pacific yarn and also my spinning journey I think when I started reading this book I really uh take it took a deep dive into all you know sheep breeds and everything everything wool and I picked this up because she's got a nice little concise explanation of Navajo churro let's see she considers a dual purpose page 74 this is a great book because it's got a lot of um it's got a quick blurb about all the a lot of different breeds then it's got patterns that are specific to certain types of fiber so the Navajo ch is a direct descendant of the chura sheep brought to Mexico in 1494 by Spanish explorers the Navajo churro breed is a story of survival against nearly All Odds from a massive Slaughter by the US Army in 1863 to drought and government imposed stock reductions in the 1930s the sheep that thrived and evolved under Navajo care is now the Navajo churro and it differs only slightly from the early chura Hardy and adaptable the Navajo chur grows a dual coated fleece with a long hair outer coat and a fine wool undercoat and I feel like this does remind me quite a bit of Icelandic wool it and this reminds me of the F the undercoat of the Icelandic um they were bred to meet the uh both the meat and textile needs of the Navajo people who focused on producing a strong colorful durable and lustrous wool that would be ideal for weaving today's Navajo churo fiber is still best suited for woven rugs saddle blankets bags and rugged outerwear but the finer grades of undercoat fibers also can be separated and spun Woolen to produce warm lofty and relatively soft yarn for mid-range garments while this fiber is primarily for hand Weavers there is a movement of foot to breed the animal for a softer more knittable fiber and I think that's what uh uh what ju Judith has here um you could see it's a beautiful pin drafted roving and it's it's actually quite quite soft 1990s the Navajo T was almost Mi so they came up into Wisconsin and Indiana and Illinois and they went to small family farms and they offered to give you a ram in 3 years and in 5 years they would come back and get the offing trying to keep so I accepted my ram in three years very good records on all of them how much wool I got off of them they came back with a semi and now the the Navajo churo are no longer in danger so I'm black that's great thank you thank you so much so I think what I'm going to do is I'm going to take my a heavier spindle and start spinning this into a thick singles yarn uh this is a spindle from Elizabeth Daly from Green sleeve spindles and Elizabeth was uh absent for quite a while I think she had uh she was open about it on Instagram she had a health is dealing with some health concerns but she is back producing spindles and if you're interested did in picking up a spindle by Elizabeth uh I suggest you follow her either on Facebook or Instagram where she posts spindles from time to time for sale and this is one of her molinar spindles it's quite heavy and one of the bigger ones that I have it's a I think this is purple heart so yeah in a little while I'll go ahead and do some spinning and uh show you how I'm going to spin this up so yeah I think this is going to be a beautiful uh beautiful two color uh paam mittens and and or hat we'll see how much yardage I get [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] he's enjoying our garden you see him he's laying right there he's just chilling in the garden so here's a picture hopefully while I was reading that I was inserting some pictures of these magnificent animals so pretty cool this book is out of print and I can't even find it on the used uh bookstores but it is available on Kindle as I've been informed so I don't really like reference books on Kindle though so I keep taking it out of my library in the hopes that they won't take it off the shelf permanently because they have a habit of doing that at our library if books don't get taken out they take them off and um so I keep taking it out to know that it's in demand yeah so yeah the only other thing I purchased at the festival was some yarn four pair of socks it's yarn from Passion Yarns uh this colorway is pistachio as you can tell it's it's a glazed green color with some Speckles it's Marino Kashmir nylon color 103 and I bought two of her minis uh this one's lavender and this one's avocado and this is going to be a pair of Color Work socks I've been on the hunt for a set for these pair of socks and the socks I'm going to knit are from this book Charming Color Work Socks by Charlotte Stone and I'm going to make the blooming lavender socks so I've been on the hunt for a set that would sort of closely mimic what she has here and uh she has this real speckly yarn here but I thought this light green in these two shades so I'm going to go ahead and I've been I've saving them in hang for so I could show you and so I'm going to wind these up and get started on those socks because I think they're just really really cute I made another pair of her sock I think I made the hot cocoa socks from Charlotte Stone and um she's just a really wonderful designer it creates a lot of whimsical and fun patterns so those were my two Treasures from from the festival I've been carting up some Fiber on my drum card I made a a little bat yesterday um some really really old uh fiber I have U I have some I'll show it to you here so it's it's like 9 years old already and it's a corale fleece from White Fish Bay and when I first scoured it I didn't take out all the grease and so I had to resour it and look at the condition that it's in it's completely lost its lock structure but it's not felted uh as a m fact you can if you're careful you can identify some of the lock here so he uh they described it as a vanilla gray so basically it's a it's a light gray fleece uh gray fibers throughout and I always I always put a little tag uh the Sheep's name was Rosalie and it was White Fish Bay 2015 so I am carting this up on my drum Carter and I'm spinning this on one of my support spindles so this is a support spindle uh from Bjorn peek a Swedish maker I picked this up about some years ago now a wonderful spindle and um yeah I'm just spinning it into a nice thin singles and you know in terms of spinning I'm really I think I am more of a process spinner because I I just enjoy the process of spinning and I don't always have goal a goal in mind so I sort of consequently kind of jump from you know project to project but um yeah I couldn't believe that this mass of disorganized wool after two passes turns into this so but just to prove that you know wool doesn't have an expiration date I thought I would U make a few bats here this is what I've been spinning on my support spindles so uh what I'm doing is I'm just um like a picker would do a swing picker which is like a device that opens up the locks I'm just using my hands to open up the locks take out any like there's a little piece of veg take that out of there just open it up if I see any uh short bits I take them out and then I I make it nice and open and then I just send it through my Carter go nice and slow and one of the most important things I've learned about carting is not to put too much fiber in at a time otherwise uh it really gets jammed up and it's hard it's hard to turn so you have to you know take it nice and slow going uh sometimes you can do all this picking separately um and then take all your picked locks maybe if they're in a basket or something and then do your do your carding all at once I like to do things in stages where I you know card a little bit spin a little bit card a little bit spin a little bit hence I have a lot of partially started spins I also have this which I love um this is a a brush that came with my Carter that you also serves the same sort of purpose of packing in and doing a little bit of extra uh cing caring or basically smoothing it's like brushing your [Applause] hair so get a few more locks here I don't like to make my baths too too big I I find that and make them a little bit smaller um I can I can get probably 50 gram comfortably on this Carter I could probably get more but um I'm okay with smaller little smaller baths so you can see here's the fleece it's not felted nice and strong and very very soft so yeah you don't have to do anything too fancy just pick it apart with your hands and feed it in So yeah so you feed it in here and you want to make sure it's nice and and open almost transparent [Applause] so yeah yarn does not have fiber does not have an expiration date not unless not unless it gets damaged uh from moths or or mold or something I knock on knock on wood I've had pretty good luck uh with fleeces that have been in my stash for quite a while see so the advantage to having the the drum Carter bolted down is it frees this hand up you so I don't have to hold it down so doesn't move anywhere all right I'm ready to take off the first uh to take off the first pass so this doing tool it's basically a pointy metal stick it's got a nice handle on it and then what you do is you find your seam right here and I usually start the far end and you look I just take it off a little bit at a time uh use some leverage there try to get it all from the seam here all right usually a little bit comes off there and then I'm going to oops got some yellow fiber in there I'm going to take it off I just go like this sometimes I'll use this tool here to help uh release the bat a little bit better just roll it off here I got some darker fiber from a previous bat pull that off going to run this through again so I'm not too worried about some of the fiber being left on the drum and that's what it looks like after the first a after the first pass so yeah so what I do now is I just pull it off in strips like this and I open it up and I feed it through again which is what I'm going to do now [Music] [Music] as you can see this is not a really fast process um I mean I'll when I put this into my video I'm going to have to edit out a lot um fast uh fast forward I use this increase the speed so making a bat you know might take 30 minutes just to make one 50 g bat like this from scratch but it's a lot of fun seeing the fiber go from kind of this disorganized locks into a fairly uniform bat so if I was going to make a blend let's say I wanted to mix in some sari silk into this I would then introduce those fibers now during the second pass so if I was going to do a alpaca blend for example I might sandwich the alpaca in between two layers of wool and um and card which is what I've done for my sock Blends less is more when it comes to cing so I'm just pulling off little bits of the bat and sending it through you can also so what I what I'm aiming for is a real real thin thin almost paper uh transparent layer uh to send through so you can sort of see the bottom of the the the uh the where you put the fiber in I don't know what that what this is called here sometimes I put too much in and then I I regret it because I have to use like two hands to rotate and I don't think that's good for the drum for the Carter [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] I um I have a little bit of a sore shoulder because I was knitting on my Mabel cardigan hours and hours a day because I really want to have a finished object to show you guys and something with the the pattern and excessive um it actually actually hurt my shoulder a little bit so yeah so take care of your bodies don't do things that are going to make you regret because this is supposed to be an enjoyable process it's not supposed to do you're not supposed to do yourself an injury knitting [Music] and let me show you this up close now so here is the fiber after a second pass what I will do when I go to spin this is I'll just pull off a strip here I just pull off a strip and I might you know pre-draft it a little bit maybe like this and then you know put it into a little a little Nest so they have um you know more manageable like Prett I'll do two of them and I'll be like Princess Leah and here we go so I've got all these balls it really smells good so how I wonder how much this weighs let's you want to weigh it let's see let's see how much this weighs [Applause] a handy uh handy scale here put my bowl on my scale zero it out going to measure it in grams 46 G so yeah totally could have done just a little bit more fiber and and easily gotten a 50 g bat on this and you could you could pack way more if you wanted to but uh 50 g is about uh what I'm comfortable with [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] want one of these [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] so yeah quite soft and lovely so I've been working on that and that's about all the fibery things I've been working on I spent some time here in my basement trying to organize and kind of overwhelmed a little bit by all my all my projects and all my stuff but but I'm working on that so uh from my bookshelf uh this week I'm reading uh I have two books from my bookshelf uh that I want to talk about this week briefly and uh one of them is this book by Julia Cameron and Julia Cameron uh is a very prolific writer one of her most famous books is artist the artist way which I actually have but I haven't read yet but I picked this up first at my library and it's called it's never too late to Begin Again discovering creativity and meaning at midlife and Beyond and it's a 12we uh sort of program just she calls it creative recovery and uh it's it's a really really excellent book and I was going to put it out there um I don't know if you're in similar situation recently retired or if you're I'm lucky enough to be able to uh be retired but um if you're maybe an empty nester or um approaching retirement or in retirement semi-retirement um I was wondering if you'd be interested in doing a little mini um book study so I was thinking of start starting a thread on rivalry I read the introduction in the first chapter and she has four basic basic uh tenants of the program the first one is morning Pages if you if you read her uh the artist way she talks about morning Pages which are just three pages of stream of Consciousness writing that you do upon Awakening and then she has uh three other things um walking uh artist state which is like taking yourself out to explore something you're interested in and then uh Memoir it's it's it's a lot I mean I'm only into it just as a little bit but it's a wonderful uh wonderful book and I'm already getting a lot from this um if you're interested I will leave a link uh down below to to the book I picked mine up from uh Thrift Books and it was a very inexpensive and I'd love to have you know if it's one other person or you know a small group uh that might be interested in doing a little book study with me um I think that would be really uh really fun just to read through the book and just share our experiences uh with the process you can reach me through rivalry I'm the Soulful spinner on rivalry and on Instagram and you can also email me at Soulful spinning gmail.com and all my contact information is always in the description as well as any patterns I talk about so and then the other book I've been enjoying uh last couple of weeks is this Richard Osman series um it's the Thursday Murder Club series I've completed books one and two and I'm on book three and it's getting better and better uh I think this is my favorite so far yeah I guess they are doing uh I think they're doing a movie and I think Helen mirin is going to play Elizabeth best and I think uh pi brasen I think he's going to play Ron so if you've read the book I don't know what you think of that but um but this is my my evening read and it is kind of a laugh out loud story and it's a lot of fun so so if there are some books that you're enjoying we would love to hear uh what books you're enjoying you just go to rivalry um you can uh join the group and there's a thread um a books thread and I'm compiling a list because I've gotten some great suggestions uh from a lot of viewers so yeah so I think that's all I have for you today folks uh I will most likely be back here in a couple of weeks uh I'm putting it in my intentions to do this every two weeks and um we'll we'll we'll take it from there so I appreciate uh all the time that you spend with me and all of your positive comments and I love to interact with you and please do uh stay in touch and we'll talk to you very soon take care [Music] my pies over there were pretty much spent now and then we've got a corner Garden that is the hangout for our resident rabbit family which they're kind of a nuisance but they are so cute and they give my peaches a run for her money so yeah things are looking pretty good here uh we've got some radishes growing we've got some carrots growing got some herbs some basil and we got some volunteer fennel here smells so good and then just the other day we picked out these two pots uh two blue pots and we have our geraniums so we got a fair amount of rain last night um it's Sunday morning I thought I would give you just a little tour of what we've got going on in in the garden so I've got two beds of Mery Golds we're doing some blueberries and pots this year we're doing a lot of container gardening this year as well as our beds there's our dandas and then we just got some Rose is here last couple of [Music] days we grew our tomatoes from seed this year we planted um planted seeds early late winter early spring and they're doing quite well let got some more Mary golds for [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music]
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Channel: Soulful Spinning
Views: 4,483
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Length: 59min 59sec (3599 seconds)
Published: Sun Jun 02 2024
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