Dyeing Weekend

This weekend I had some major dye plans.  I bought enough wool to make myself a jumper (I am thinking Swirled Pentagons by Norah Gaughan), but I bought it in white (it was bargainacious).  I thought I’d just dye it.  Easy, huh?  Dyeing a kilogram of wool is a big undertaking for me, so I decided I may as well make dyeing the focus of my weekend.  I told a friend and she came round ready to leaf print yesterday, with an entire woollen blanket that was ready for improvement.

So here we are laying out leaves… these are on some smooth silk noil.  It is in the dye pot now as I couldn’t fit it in yesterday…

Here’s the blanket bundle before…

Some of our bundles during…

And here is the blanket afterward, just unwrapped.

My other dye job looked all right to begin with but there are some very dark patches–perhaps I did not dissolve the dye properly.  Now I have it out of the dye pot I think a second attempt might be called for!  The dye is Landscapes ‘Plum’.  Here it is in the pot, looking quite good, really:

I may have to rescue it by overdyeing.  I am considering ‘Bloodwood’–failing all else, ‘Currawong’ (that is, black)!  So, some successes and some failures.  Some alpaca that I tried out my new combs on came out beautifully, and here is the finished yarn.  After my plum episode, I’m not ready to consider dyeing this!  It was a gift from a friend whose generous partner came home from a drive with not one, but several alpaca fleeces.  Thanks to them both for this sample.

 

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Eucalyptus leaf print of the day

Since reading India Flint’s wonderful book Eco-Colour (2008), I have spent many an hour experimenting with her concept of the eco-print.  Flint focuses on printing on wool and silk, and I highly recommend her books and blog.  Since I do much more sewing with cotton, linen and hemp (and have made only a few special things from silk and wool)… I have experimented at length to get eucalyptus leaf prints onto cotton and linen fabrics.  More of that later.  But recently I leaf printed some woolen thermal underwear for a friend (and couldn’t wait for sun to take a picture before I handed them to her–I’m impatient that way).  But I also dyed this for myself…  Colour me happy with the result!

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Small beginnings

It’s a cold, windy and wet night tonight.  So I’ve tucked myself in at home and I’m finally starting up a blog where I’m hoping to tell some stories about my passion for making… it is certainly a night for staying warm.  A night for slippers and shawl and spinning wheel, I think!

In posts to come, I’ll be talking about growing and dyeing with plants, spinning yarn, sewing, knitting and other slow ways of bringing into being things that are hand made, useful, lovely and one-of-a-kind.

I love to source what I can locally and to reuse when I can.  Today I’ve been preparing hand spun yarns, including some dyed with Eucalyptus leaves and bark, because I’ve decided to enter the local show.  Last year I was sad to see how few spinning entries there were.  So, I’ve entered several categories where I hope to show people who come to look that spinning isn’t a dying craft!

Here is one of my entries: corespun natural fibres on a simulplied core (using techniques learned from the work of the wonderful Jacey Boggs).  The orange fibre is eucalypt dyed merino and the pale pink is finely shredded eucalypt printed linen fabric.

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