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Showing posts with label hand-dyed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hand-dyed. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Little sunny dress

For my little H


Pattern Sunny Lou dress by Annie Rowden











Yarn Wool2dye4 bfl merino SW sport weight
Color Irish green, Jade Dharma dye



Monday, April 14, 2014

Fun dyeing . . . going wrong???

I had fun dyeing with one color but even more when mixing colors and see how it ends up


1. RB lemonade (Kool-aid) and smidgen of Sand Dune (Dharma dye)
2. Berry blasting cherry (Kool-aid) and smidgen of Salmon (Jacquard dye)
3. Smidgen of Twilight grey (Dharma dye) and dust of Teal (Jacquard dye)
4. Grape (Kool-aid) and smidgen of Burgundy (Jacquard dye)
5. Smidgen of Fawn (Dharma dye)
6. Smidgen of Green Juniper (Wilton food coloring)
7. Smidgen of royal blue (Jacquard dye)


All skeins are 25 g and dye mix dissolved in  100 ml of hot water.






✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿ ✿


I pour in the mix little by little in the large ball,
remove the yarn,
pour a little again,
cook in microwave
and let it stand until water is clear.


but for the no 6, I forgot to remove the yarn 
before pouring the mix and voila...


... horrible camouflage color instead of a nice light green forest color.

Despite this skein, I like the rest of the color. 
The kool-aid helps to bring light to acid dye colors and a nice smell. 
The yarn remains soft despite me torturing it many times
I will be mixing again various dyes. 


Friday, June 14, 2013

Playing with colors and small skeins

I just love playing with colors and yarn dyeing

this time I had
✏ 14 colors (Jacquard acid dye)
✏ 16 small skeins of fingering yarn
superwash is preferred
(BFL, MCN, Knit picks, 25 g each)


1. Tools are needed
✏ a small scale 
✏ a small measurement tool
✏ water (100 ml per 1g dye)
✏ small labelled cups
✏ large jars if you decide to use the microwave


2. Experimenting
✏ small tissue paper can be useful to see what color I will look like at the end
✏ prepare the jars with filling with hot water half way
✏ add 10ml of vinegar in each jar
✏ add dyed water from cup
✏ stir the mix
✏ add yarn

3. Heating
✏ I put the jar in microwave for 2 minutes non stop, 
then 4 times 30 seconds,
checking each time to make sure yarn is not boiling,
if you yarn boils it is felting.


4. Drying
Once microwaved, let the yarn rest in jar until water cool (overnight if needed),
it helps the yarn to better absorb the dye.
Water must be transparent.
Then rinse and let it dry.

5. Proudly take a picture and Instagram it
✏ Salmon and ecru
✏ Brown and ecru
✏ Teal
✏  Vermillion
✏ Royal blue
✏ Aztec gold



6. 2nd experiment 
✏ take some of the colors I didn't like and
dye it over with Kool-aid 
(Same process 24 hours later)



Look at these gorgeous colors!!!

✏ Brown and peach mango
✏  Sky blue and silver grey
✏ Chestnut and Grape
✏  Salmon and orange
✏ Pumpkin orange and grape
✏ Ecru and IBR lemonade
✏ Silver grey and strawberry-kiwi
✏ Gun metal and navy
✏ Gold ochre, pina and grape
✏ Chartreuse, lemonade and ecru





Comments on the experience
✏ preferred yarn superwash BFL, MCN DK, fingering was too thin
✏ some colors like silver grey mixes well with pink and blue
✏ don't forget the vinegar or the dye won't stay on yarn
✏ use stock solution of dye if small quantity dyed
✏ a good set of measuring tools are essential
✏ understanding DOS (depth of shade)
✏ take notes . . . lots of it

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Logwood yarn dyeing

 Still playing with natural dyeing, this time with logwood


First we did a lot of testing, filling the pot with 25g skeins one every 10 minutes


Ten when the dyeing was at a good purple color, I put an entire skein of Malabrigo worsted



Voila!!



And a new Newborn Baby Blanket was born!!