Tag Archives: wool

Mellow blueness

2016-11-26-12-27-18

The woad has been thriving in this time of rain followed by warmth.  (The potatoes aren’t doing badly either, as you can see). And that can only mean one thing, when free time opens up!

2016-11-26-15-06-35

I managed to obtain Jill Goodman’s A Dyer’s Manual recently, and had the benefit of others helping me to grasp the chemistry of fresh woad and how it differs from using indigo that has already been prepared from fresh plants by someone else. I came by the book at the annual spinner’s retreat where there were folk with interest and knowledge–perfect, and very helpful indeed.  So this time I felt I knew why I was adding air in the early stages of the process, only to then remove it in the de-oygenation process required to have the dye become fully soluble and able to attach to fibres.  Previously this has been a total mystery or had me feeling I had done something wrong, or both.

2016-11-27-14-09-18

I still had part of one package of hydrosulphite left.  I am pretty keen to have it be the last.  Hydrosulphite is a substance the earth could do without. But equally, since I have it, better to use it rather than let it become stale and unusable for this process.  So I tried two vats: one with hydrosulphite and one with fructose.  The picture above is grey merino fleece descending through the ‘flower’ on the surface of the hydrosulphite vat and into the yellowy depths below.

2016-11-26-17-45-56

This image is the fructose vat, which involved some guesswork on my part (no way to measure how much woad pigment there was in my solution). I am not experienced enough to have great judgment or to trust my own judgement.  I can measure temperature and I can measure Ph.  The complex part is judging the reduction (de-oxygenation) of the vat. This looked very promising to me!  That said, there were moments when I had realisations that gave me pause.  Jill Goodman, for example, seems to live in England and I suspect her conditions and mine are not the same. She goes from scalding leaves with boiling water through various processes to heating the vat to raise it to 50C (there was a lot of conversion to metric involved for me)… I did the processes concerned and still had a vat at 70C and decided in the end to put the vat in a sink of cold water and ice!

2016-11-26-16-57-16

This linen scarf did the amazing woad magic of going from yellow to green to blue when put out into the air.

2016-11-26-17-13-35

Both of my tied textiles dyed only on the outside and therefore were re-tied and re-dipped. The greeny-blue of the image above converted to blue very quickly on rinsing (you can see an image further down).

2016-11-27-15-37-27

Soon I had dyed my planned fabrics and imagined that the vat would be exhausted, because previous vats have yielded so little.  The next day it was clear that the hydros vat was not exhausted, so I adjusted Ph and temperature and set about continuing to dye. The fructose vat was still not reduced, so far as I could tell with a test dip, though again it looked promising and eventually looked much like the hydros vat.  However, it still had not reduced, and thus, was unable to dye.  In the late afternoon I decided it probably didn’t have any dye in it. Do not read on if you have a weak constitution–but one of the reasons for my belief was that I had accidentally boiled the fructose vat early in the process. Eeek! I had a very little hydros left, so added some to the fructose vat.  Then half an hour later, a little more.  30 minutes later, it came into order and began to dye, and I dyed using both vats until bed time using the only clean fleece I seem to have. The fructose-hydros vat dyed over two more days, as it turned out!

2016-11-27-18-18-18

I threw in more cloth and went to bed, feeling extremely pleased.  On the down side, I used hydros.  On the up side, it can only have been a matter of time before that fructose vat would have reduced.  I just needed to hold my nerve and be patient.  Maybe add more fructose. Admittedly, time is one of my biggest issues because I do have a day job and other commitments.  However, this is by far the most successful woad effort to date.  I now understand that I need to use a vat rather than direct dyeing for the woad to be wash-fast.  I think I now have a sense of how to tell whether there is dye in the vat (at all) as I process the solution.  The low concentrations of colour claimed for woad are not so low as to make it useless, and I have quite a bit of leaf.  One vat with 1.6 kg leaves and one with 900g leaves from one part of the garden where other things have struggled to grow well–and this is my second harvest from them.  I also have the happy sense that my understanding is sufficient to reach success with a fermentation/fructose vat given time.  The pigment from my previous crop of woad is in a different vat which has not shown promise even though I have been waiting for weeks.  But it still may!  And I am confident now that reduction is the main issue and not one of the other possibilities.  Very encouraging mellow blues–and more pictures to come when everything is clean and dry.

9 Comments

Filed under Dye Plants, Natural dyeing

Needle books on the Murray River

2016-11-11-17-28-37

We went for a birthday holiday on a house boat on the Mighty Murray River.  I’ve never been on a house boat before and it was pretty funny to be in something with six bedrooms, but on the water!  We set out on a sunny day and it was just lovely.  And then, hours before sunset, the sky turned dark.  The river was anything but calm.  My capable companions decided it was time to find a mooring, and that the green tinge in the distant clouds was a sign of hail even though it is November.  And we moored just in time for powerful winds, amazing rain… the whole thing.

2016-11-11-19-40-19

Eventually things calmed down and for those feeling nauseous, that part subsided, and the sun set over beautiful river red gums.

2016-11-12-10-22-00

Last week I finally stitched these two little eucalyptus dyed needle books together with madder-dyed thread and they were in my sewing tin along with everything else, so they found new homes among my companions.  Here they sit on the obligatory holiday puzzle.

2016-11-12-11-00-33

It wasn’t all wild weather… there were naps and songs and stories and birthday cake and lots of delicious food and company, and beautiful views.  There were so many birds… cormorants, pelicans, ducks and ducklings, superb blue wrens, raptors of various kinds… fabulous!

2016-11-12-13-06-00

On our return we discovered that every single car (and a lot of houseboats) had been hit by hail the size of golf balls.  In November.  We’d had a summary phoned in on our first night out, but it was quite a sight in person.  After a safety check, we drove home slowly, with the light dancing off all the cracks from 17 major hits on the windscreen. Too many dents in the car to count! Just as well there were needle books to keep things a little bit sensible in between times.  A person needs evidence of the ordinary in these challenging times.

2016-11-13-18-58-12

14 Comments

Filed under Natural dyeing, Sewing

Leafy bundles

First there was a walk home from a distant railway station.  Cotinus (smoke bush) growing through a fence….

2016-11-04-15-35-34

Then there was a walk home from a bus stop on a major road further from home than the one I usually use.  And the amazing discovery of a HUGE maple with finely ferny leaves.  Hanging over a high fence.

2016-11-04-15-35-17

Well. It was only a matter of time… a recycled linen shirt and a wool scarf…2016-11-04-15-43-06

A couple of bundles…

2016-11-04-16-05-54

I love the transformation!

2016-11-05-12-44-20

Some of the maple leaves came out pale. 2016-11-05-12-54-27

Those closest to the iron at the centre of the bundle…

2016-11-05-12-54-18

Perhaps I chose the wrong side of the cotinus as the one likely to give colour, because…

imag2906

And the scarf, mmmm!

2016-11-08-11-00-26

This one is destined to become a birthday gift.

2016-11-08-10-59-28

12 Comments

Filed under Eucalypts, Leaf prints, Natural dyeing

Alas, the red socks!

Once upon a time, I cast on a lovely pair of red socks, from possum wool.  They had an intended recipient and unusually, I had told her they were coming.

2016-08-26-08-52-26

Here we are on the way to work on the bus. I am known to some in my workplace as the parsley fairy.

2016-09-05-17-24-15

Here they are on the way to the Newcastle Local Court, out of focus on the window ledge of the plane.  And then, one day I went to a long series of meetings and was one and a half socks in, past the heel and on the home strait toward the toe… I remember seeing the bag with the socks in it on my office desk and thinking I should pack that to take home.  I caught an usual series of public transport home, and when I stopped to change from bus to tram and the tram was late, I got out my knitting.  Well, I would have, but it was GONE!!!!  I know you will understand I hunted high and low and contacted several different possible places a lost sock might be handed in.  But I think I have to face the fact that my one and a half socks, wool, needles and bag… are GONE to who only knows where?  But quite likely, somewhere where those socks will not be completed or warm anyone’s toes, sadly.

12 Comments

Filed under Knitting

Eucalyptus dyeing

In not-so-recent dye baths, I included a wool scarf for a friend.

IMAG2094

I love the way it turned out.  I hope she will too.  I bundled up E Scoparia leaves and some windfalls from a tree I think might be E Nicholii.  It branches (what I mean is it that it has been brutally pruned) very high so these windfalls gave me leaves to try that I otherwise could never reach.

IMAG2093

Love the string resist marks…

IMAG2091

Then I returned to the E Cladocalyx bark I harvested weeks back which has been steeping.

IMAG2089

Calico mordanted in soy and lots of clamping was the choice of the day.

IMAG2090

The wet fabric next day (I know, patience is the dyer’s friend, but my friend was out for the day).

2016-07-18 11.25.28

I do especially love the buds!

2016-07-18 11.25.18

The overall effect… suggesting my fold-and-clamp technique may require more practice!

2016-07-18 11.25.36

 

5 Comments

Filed under Leaf prints, Natural dyeing

Purple socks

2016-03-29 11.37.19

Remember this skein of hand spun sock yarn?  Suffolk/mohair/silk, three ply.

2016-05-31 15.53.07

It made a perfectly good cake. One day I cast on, on public transport. The train, evidently.

2016-06-08 08.57.40

And then I forgot to take photos for quite some time the next thing you know, here I am ready to graft the toe of the first sock at a conference in Wellington, Aotearoa (New Zealand)!

IMAG1899

Did I mention the wonderful beauty of Aotearoa?

IMAG1888 IMAG1886  IMG_20160712_195353 IMG_20160712_195545

And then… suddenly there were two. When I was part way through the second they were lost!  Then found again by security and here was a happy reunion a few days later with great relief on my part.

IMAG2310

And now I am preparing to make them into a nice little parcel for a friend with popsicle toes. With some hand twined silk string.

IMAG2309

 

 

 

6 Comments

Filed under Spinning

Woad in winter

2016-07-18 11.33.25

I realised a little late that I should have picked my woad earlier. But decided I had nothing to lose by picking it now.

2016-07-18 11.41.33

Then the chopping…

2016-07-18 13.42.25

Then the vat. How blue should the froth be, to be blue enough? These are the questions that plague my blue-dyeing!

2016-07-18 14.35.48

Eventually, I had a vat. The wool came out the same colour it was when it went in. The second vat had a lot more leaf to the same volume of water.

2016-07-18 16.52.14

I ended up with some blue-pale blue-bluish wool.

2016-07-23 14.46.19

And some silk thread that is more of a silver grey.  I swear it was blue after the second vat, but either subsequent re-dips stripped the colour back out, or it was fugitive.  Or I dreamed it. Well, they do say that woad doesn’t bear much indigotin, and harvesting in winter is not ideal.  But, am I allowed to be a bit disappointed anyway?

2016-07-23 14.46.40

12 Comments

Filed under Natural dyeing

Milky merino and eucalyptus turtleneck

I was so excited by my recent winter wardrobe success, that I decided to go again.  So I made another turtleneck using the same pattern from milky merino.  This time, I made it longer than required. I’ve had serious shrinkage with this fabric–whether it was my carelessness or the fabric is yet to be clarified. I expect it was my carelessness… This time I used a red zipper from the stash, which looked pretty amazing on the undyed item, but apparently I took no photos. And either I followed the instructions on the pattern (just for something completely different), or perhaps it was luck, but zipper insertion went smoothly.

2016-07-22 12.17.27

Then I decided to sort out one of my spencers (long sleeved underwear for warmth). It shrank in dyeing as well as being perhaps a little short to begin with. It rides up, the reverse of what clothing worn for warmth should do.  So I added some serious length to it.  I love the dyeing on this garment–details here.  But it just wasn’t working for its intended purpose.

2016-07-22 12.18.10

I went out for a walk and then bundled up.

2016-07-23 12.17.51

The bundles came out of the dye pot looking splendid.

2016-07-24 09.55.58

The spencer came out a very good length and is much more useable.  I did prefer the print before, but this one is pretty lovely too.

IMAG2222

Here is the new turtleneck.  I like it!  If anything it is a little loose.

IMAG2215

The red zipper works fine.

IMAG2221

E Scoparia is in bud, which also works well.

IMAG2216

I tried a different folding strategy.  I love the colour and pattern, less sure about the location.  And now I am happily wearing my new top for the rest of the cold weather.

IMAG2218

 

16 Comments

Filed under Leaf prints, Natural dyeing

Hand spun, naturally dyed, hand knit and finished

I have finally finished the colourwork jumper.

2016-07-21 12.48.34

The design includes beets from Kate Davies‘ Beet Heid tam. It’s a variation on her Neep Heid pattern.  I love her designs, though to be honest I can’t picture myself personally wearing many of them (which is just not the same question).  And, I tend to knit simple. I am a long time reader of her blog: she is a lovely writer too.  But this application of her design is all my own strange idea, with the jumper knit–or at least I tried to knit–to measurements from one of the recipient’s hoodies. I see on Ravelry that one person has been moved to knit a neep cardigan, and there are a massive number of tams too, neep-, beet-, acorn- and radish-heids among them.

2016-07-21 12.49.27

I’ve knit this jumper for my fairy goddess son, who is a true admirer of gardening, vegetables in general and beetroots very much included. Those who are curious about the dyeing can find a bit of a summary here.

2016-07-21 12.47.00

He is a lover of colours too, and when asked his favourite colour in my hearing at any time, has responded ‘the rainbow!’ with a huge grin.  I knit this jumper from the fleece of a sheep called Viola and all these colours are from plants with the exception of the deep beet colour and the pink, from cochineal. I admit this rainbow is not exactly classic in colour and the woad colours are very pale in the zone of blue and indigo!

2016-07-21 12.48.25

I loved having so many colours to play with but took advice from one of my knitting companions in Wellington and kept the neck and shoulders simple.

2016-07-21 12.47.23

I dealt with the maths of the pattern repeat with some simple patterning under the sleeves.

2016-07-21 12.46.33

And now that it’s finished, I can give in to the urge to cast on all the small projects!

21 Comments

Filed under Knitting, Natural dyeing

Work still in progress

Since I last wrote there has been sleeve knitting in an airport.

IMAG1881

Followed by sleeve knitting on a plane.

IMAG1882

Followed by good times with fellow knitters and crocheters who also happen to share my kind of day job and therefore shared a conference I’ve been at… and this meant I brought hand spun wool plain and strange to share.

IMAG1894

Some of it has already had a crochet hook applied to it and been turned into a substantial amount of shawl/cowl…

IMAG1893

Meanwhile, sleeves united with body far from home (and on the twelfth floor)!

IMAG1895

That moment when you decide to graft the seam between sleeve and body together…

IMAG1898

And a certain amount of visiting yarn shops.  My commitment to knitting handspun may have weakened a little… but as you can see, I’ve made quite a bit of handspun knitting progress.  So much that I may need to spin more grey yarn when I get home to finish this little treasure…

IMAG1907

 

1 Comment

Filed under Knitting