Tag Archives: dyeing

Been a While….

It’s been a while since I last wrote. 2 months and 2 weeks, to be exact. And my life has not been devoid of knitting nor crafty stuff….no, not at all! There has been a lot of travel, and not a ton of knitting…..but there has been some.

The first adventure I had after the last post was completely unexpected. I was at a conference in St. Paul, Minnesota, and I was reading a blog post by Stephanie Pearl McPhee where she mentioned flying from California to Minnesota. At first I thought “how cool, soon I’ll be flying from St. Paul to California!” and then I wondered, “will we overlap in the Twin Cities?” (If you don’t know, those cities border each other.)

The answer, my friends, is yes, and this happened at Steven Be:
Stephanie blesses my sock

Steven was absolutely fabulous and was in full force that day. The yarn shop has yarn and knitted things everywhere. I loved it from a chaotic good perspective. I bought some sock yarn and some sock needles, and immediately started in on a sock. And I had Stephanie sign some books, of course.

The next adventure I had was when I found the Mass Ave Knit Shop in Indianapolis. It was about half a mile from the hotel I was staying at, and I spent several hours there on a Saturday before leaving for the airport. I picked up some plain white yarn (purpose to be revealed later) and knit for several hours….though at this point I cannot remember what I was knitting! For arguments’ sake, let’s say I was knitting a pattern from Jeri, a fellow Common Cod Fiber Guild member, which she showed at Show and Tell during our September meeting. The pattern is called “Vestboro”, and this is how far I got as of mid-October, so it’s a pretty good bet to say that’s what I was working on:

Vestboro center

The knit shop was large, and had tons of yarn! Due to all my travel this year, I have not been knitting and spinning as much as I used to. Last November I stopped being able to keep up with my monthly fiber club, and I stayed behind all year. Suffice it to say, I am overflowing with yarn and fiber….and so is my fiber room. So I am limiting my souvenir yarn…for now.

The knit shop was full of women knitting, and wonderful local donuts, and instead of souvenir yarn I bought myself an accordion-type box to store my dpns in by size. It was a great place to spend several hours knitting.

I attended Rhinebeck aka NY Sheep & Wool, where I acquired a Bernina 1230 sewing machine, circa 1989–1998. I haven’t yet started playing with it, as I have been WAY too busy with other things – Halloween crafts, holiday gift knitting, and test knitting! At Rhinebeck I took 2 classes – a spinning class with Abby Franquemont (I can cross that off the bucket list now!) and a dyeing class with Gail Callahan, the Kangaroo Dyer, in which I learned a ton about dyeing and made this beautiful rainbow:

my rainbow of dyeing

I did not knit for much of September and October because I was doing other crafty things – specifically, I was hand-sewing my Halloween costume – Sally from the Nightmare Before Christmas. It came out better than I expected, which was great, because it was for an awesome wedding:

Julia as a nurse and me as Sally, from the Nightmare Before Christmas

And yes, I also knit the wig.

In November I was test knitting. And test knitting. And test knitting. I will show you pictures once they are public, but for now, things remain secret.

I took a mitten class at Mind’s Eye Yarns and still have not finished knitting the first mitten, much less the second mitten. But I learned a few good tips along the way and am excited to use them.

Remember that white yarn I bought in Indianapolis? It was for some classes with Lucy Neatby, who is chock-full of amazing tips and tricks for knitting. I filled out a wishlist with stuff I want, from patterns to DVDs. Lucy is fun, smart and easy to learn from. I took three classes with her – buttonholes, finishing, and socks. Her handouts are invaluable. I took time off work and spent a pretty penny to learn from Lucy, and I would do it again in a heartbeat. She’s THAT good.

And then it was December…..the test knitting was finally finished, and then it was time to knit gifts! I knit hats for my brother-in-law and his wife (in grey and red Ushya yarn), and I did not, sadly, take any pictures of those hats. I also knit a hat for my mother-in-law in green, and again, no pictures. I do have pictures of the tiny slightly felted purse I made for my aunt-in-law (using handspun Portuguese Merino in the “A Bug’s Life” colorway) and the DNA scarf I made for my father-in-law out of Kauni (that I bought while in Halifax on my knitting cruise in July):

Felted wallet

DNA Scarf

And then during and after Christmas I knit 2 chemo caps for a cousin-in-law – one was brown and one was black with sequins (so she’d have “evening hair”) – here’s a pic of me modeling the brown one:

fun fur hat in brown

So with all that done, I have started spinning again….although I find I cannot spin for hours like I used to. I’ll have to work up to that again. In the meantime, I’ve been spinning an hour or two at a time in the evenings, and yesterday I took a break to knit myself the Mind’s Eye Yarns free Waffle Stitch Hat pattern, so I could finally have a hat for myself:

my hat!

It was super-quick to knit, and I love it!

more broken black, and a bit of xmas

I haven’t been able to capture the color of this yarn! It’s darker than it shows here. I should swatch some up, try some beads on it… see if the 6/0 or 8/0 beads work better.

wiltons 009

wiltons 010 wiltons 011

Stuff just keeps getting in the way of knitting, busy season and all, and I think I’m coming down with a cold. I manage to get home from work, get dinner together, and then I’m pretty much done. I’m horrified at the piles of things all over the table (the table that still has the tablecloth from Thanksgiving on it, but with an addition of glittery sparkles from writing the xmas cards).

Clutter. Nemesis.

We finally got the tree decorated. Mostly I just took ornaments out of boxes and got boyo and his friend to do much of it. And my girlfriend. Who I plied with martinis.

They did a fabulous job! Even boyo’s friend, who tells me his mom won’t let him decorate their tree, because he breaks too many ornaments.

tree (40)

It’s a shitty picture, I know. But I think I took maybe 25 pictures, and this was about the best. I have lots of favorite ornaments. These, in particular, amuse me. I’m pretty sure I paid 10 cents for them. They even came in their original box!

tree (4)

We did a bit of shopping this past weekend. Nice thing about having a 17 year old who is interested in getting more clothes? You can go shopping with him and tell him “this will go under the tree, yaknow” and he’s all fine with that. (and yes, he did drag me into Wal-Mart, first time in several years… I had to take a deep breath when we walked out, and blather about surviving the ordeal).

shopping (1) shopping (2)
(he poses with the villain, I pose with the tacky xmas decoration… and then I went out and immediately bought a bunch of silver tinsel garland to make one of these… maybe I’ll do it for Friday’s work party).

We have a new thing at work! The conference room on our floor is gorgeous (as is the rest of the floor), but it is terribly echoey. All that glass, hard floor, 3 windows, hard walls… it was fairly painful to sit through a meeting in here sometimes. We started to think about getting some acoustical ceiling tiles, and then I said “wait a second, historical rehab here, maybe we should ask somebody“, and sure ’nuff, we shouldn’t just paste the things to the ceilings.

So, several months after starting this process, and working with an architect with the state, we have this drop ceiling thingamajig. It lets most of the light through (it is darker) and also doesn’t interfere with the sprinkler system. We had a smallish meeting in there today, and the echo is better. Not gone, but better. We probably need a rug, but we are resisting that notion.

acoustic solution (1)
(there is usually a huge central table composed of 6 small rectangular tables and 2 end pieces, and chairs).

Time for bed!

twisted and breaking black

Twisted

A small gift for our ahijada in Guatemala (sponsor child, mostly we wired her money).

Pretty Twisted from Knitty. A great way to use up odd bits of yarn, though I think I probably made these longer than they need to be…
twisted (3) twisted (1)

twisted (7) twisted (5) twisted (2)

As the yarn was colorful and textured, I just made the simple versions. Check the link above for other versions on the pattern!

breaking black

Apparently this is the holy grail of dyeing yarn with food color. I sort of followed the instructions at the link, but I wasn’t going to be testing the technique on some 0.2 ounces of wool… I just went for it on ~8 oz of alpaca lace.

breaking black (3) breaking black (5) breaking black (6) breaking black (6)

Starting with plain yarn, then dropping some Wilton’s black on the yarn. I started by using the q-tip as recommended in the link, but then moved on to a butter knife to get more into the yarn. I put some vinegar on it, which didn’t seem like enough, so I added more.

Wilton’s black has fd&c red #3, fd&c blue#1, and yellow 5&6. They “break” out at different rates and adding vinegar assists the colors in “breaking”. Or it was supposed to… I don’t know if I added to much food color, not enough vinegar, or what. Fun things were supposed to happen after half an hour or so. Not much happened after a couple of hours, so I put a bit more vinegar on it and smooshed it around. And then went to bed. In the morning, it looked much the same.

So I got all the dry yarn wet with some water with a drop of soap in it. It seemed to work well for the originally pink yarn, but nothing was going on with the white.
breaking black (16) breaking black (22) breaking black (24) breaking black (25)
That last shot is the pink, after microwaving it a bit… there’s still color in the fluid, so it wasn’t done yet. I thought I might have too much color in it, so I rinsed it a bit, and all the color started coming out. Stop! Stop!

I decided to go into full out experimental mode. I tossed all the yarn into a big pot, rinsed the cookie sheets and put that water (it was greenish) into the pot. Heated it up (boiled it a bit by mistake), and after half an hour added a glop of vinegar, and then after another hour or so added another glop. It sat for a few hours cooling while we went to cut an xmas tree.

It sucked up nearly all the color! The water was very faintly rosy. Here’s the yarn, still wet from the rinse. The true color is on the darker side. It’s hard to tell which was which to begin with, but I think the darker yarn was the pink (on the left in the photos below).
breaking black (31) breaking black (26)

Why this madness?

Because I want to knit the Celestarium shawl! It’s the night sky of the northern hemisphere, with accurate star charts. Here’s the Ravelry page about the pattern, which notes the shawl is an accurate view of the night sky from the North Pole in the form of a pi shawl. Eyelets and beads are used to represent the stars. The center bead represents Polaris.

HOW COOL IS THAT?!?!?!?!?! (and talk about madness…)

Striped Mushroom Sweater Finished!

It’s actually been finished for a week or two now, but it had to be blocked, and then I had to get pictures of DH wearing it… all the important things, ya know? It’s been two years in the making, but it’s done.

Two years ago I went to Rhinebeck and picked up 11 skeins of plain Bartlett Yarn. A year ago I caked up all the yarn I’d dyed with mushrooms. All the details about which mushrooms gave which colors with which mordants are here. DH’s birthday is in January, and this sweater was intended for his birthday, January 2012. He finally got it mid-September!

Here are a few re-cap pics,
cakes 013 <striped mushroom sweater body

And here it is done,
finished and blocked mushroom sweater (10)

The back, and a sleeve,
finished and blocked mushroom sweater (2) finished and blocked mushroom sweater (7)

And on,
mushroom sweater 009 mushroom sweater 013

Shoulder detail,
finished and blocked mushroom sweater (15)

This is the Real Raggsock pattern from Inger Fredholm’s Knitting with a Smile. I’ve met her and her (late) husband Nils. She’s a lovely person (and he was as well). My pal Alphy is friends with Inger, and I hope she sees this version of her pattern!

More details over on my Ravelry project page for this sweater. Basically I did a bunch of short-rows in the back to account for shoulders. We always think of men as straight up and down, especially DH, who is thin, but men have shapes and these need to be accounted for, just like boobage in women’s sweaters. I made this sweater for DH years ago (another Ravelry project link), without additional length in the back, and it just rides up, about 4 inches in the back! Makes me crazed, but he still wears the thing… even after re-kitting the cuffs twice (and currently the elbows are worn through and the cuffs need to be re-done).

I’m hoping he’ll treat the mushroom stripes the same and wear it all the time.

Crazy dyeing weekend and poking about the garden

Two weekends ago, I went with Dianna to Kristen’s place in Vermont to hang around with friends and dye fiber and yarn. It was a blast! We had pots going outside for natural dyeing, including an indigo vat, and there were acid dyes on the porch… we experimented with kettle dyeing, painting and steaming the fiber, crock pots, dyeing with plants and fungi, overdyeing what we dyed, overdyeing bleh fiber we brought… Chaos, but great fun, and great folks to spend the weekend with. Many of the same folks as were at shearing in May, but we missed Sara!

All the photos are here in my flickr set, but here are a few highlights…

Everybody hanging on the porch, getting ready,
dye weekend 066

The indigo vat… the fiber comes out of the vat green and turns blue on exposure to oxygen. Way cool!
dye weekend 073

Acid dyes, Toby handpainting, and fiber wrapped and ready to steam:
dye weekend 083 dye weekend 080 dye weekend 090

Simmering weeds, and rinsing Phaeolus dyed yarn,
dye weekend 095 dye weekend 093

Some of our results:
dye weekend 115 dye weekend 116 dye weekend 099

The rain held off until we were done with the bulk of it all! We got to visit with Kristen’s flock, and I got to help with the foot rot treatment (just a few of the goats, they’re all doing far better now).

dye weekend 103 dye weekend 109
dye weekend 047 dye weekend 048

The calf thought Toby was made of milk. He started on her hand, moved to her crutch, and then her knee! Little Blue (see the shearing link, first paragraph) has gotten bigger, and he’s a little fatty, but he’s still the smallest goat!
dye weekend 061 dye weekend 050

And here’s the stuff I dyed:
dye weekend results

Couple of mystery skeins dyed in indigo. I think they both are from Friends Folly; the top one is a mohair/wool blend and the other is angora or an angora blend.
dye weekend results (12)

Some old gray icelandic called Georgetown that I used to make DH a sweater years ago (rav link), and some Aarlan alpaca/wool/silk that was a brownish to start with. The icelandic took the “paint”, the color is more subtle on the other yarn. These are on the bottom, on the right, and here,
dye weekend results (5)

I also overdyed some charcoal mohair in indigo… only one half of the skein. It’s subtle and hard to see in the photo, but I like it. This is hanging in the middle on the bottom of the big pic.

Pretty sure this was dyed initially with goldenrod, and then into the indigo. Much better! It’s just domestic wool roving from Halcyon.
dye weekend results (3)

Tencel and Seacell out of the crock pot and acid dyed. The fiber went from being smooth and silky straight to somewhat kinky. I think it’ll spin up well. I can tell which is which by feel, but not in the photo.
dye weekend results (2)

The photo doesn’t do this color justice… It’s a fabulous grey/green/sagey color. It’s handspun romney that a friend picked up for me. Dyed first in tansy, giving a really “meh” pale yellow, so we added some iron, which saddened the color and made it kinda greyish green, and then we added what was left of the goldenrod to the pot, which deepened the grey-green.
dye weekend results (19)

There’s also some pink/purple romney roving (it’s in the top photo). I was stepping outside of my usual color scheme with that one. I think it may go to somebody who will love it more than I will.

garden pics!

Pappus of some seed…
garden (4)

You can see I was screwing around with the macro on my little point and shoot,
garden (10)

Seems like everywhere the damned Japanese beetles are mating…
rocky knoll yard (13)
What was interesting, though, is that many of them would assume some weird posture when I got too close… legs out and up at an angle, and both the male and female would do it, as would the ones near them.

The morning glories are doing well, as are the sungolds behind them,
morning glory july (1) morning glory july (4)

And DH was away for a week, and I didn’t pay any attention to the cucumbers… oops,
garden (33)
We’ve managed to squirrel away most of these in neighbors’ and coworkers’ cars…

Summer Breather

Farm Campers
Whoa.  Sorry I slid off the radar last week.  As you know, we had a second week of Farm Camp, and it went exceedingly well.  A fine group of seven campers got to know the farm and all its inhabitants up close.  My excellent helpers came through for us, and I finished off our first real Farm Camp sessions very encouraged about next year.  I learned some things that will help me tweak it for the better, but overall, I think we did really well.  Big, big thanks to everyone who contributed!

Bandera courthouse.  Cool little town.
I had hardly put the glue sticks and construction paper away when it was time for me to help drive my teenager and four of her friends down to the Texas Hill Country for two weeks of camp.  I've made this trip twice before with another of the moms, and we always have a great time.  Because of the logistics, we got to spend the night in Kerrville before driving the kids into the camp the next day.  What a fun little vacation.  Rested, did some sightseeing of a rustic variety, and got to visit with my friend, my daughter, and all the girls.

Dogs need grooming.
And now, it's back home, with one less person in the house to look after, and just the long To Do list that has been breathing down my neck for a while.  Oh, and I'd like to re-organize every room in the house.  A bit ambitious, I know, but I can dream. 

Dyed BFL turned into yarn.
Tomorrow is a holiday, and I'm thinking of dyeing some more roving.  The beautiful BFL I dyed a couple of weeks ago has flown off the shelves, and needs replenishing.  Weather forecast for the rest of the week: Not Horrid.  Perfect for skirting and washing pounds and pounds of fiber.  Add that to the list...

And Happy Independence Day!


Summer Breather

Farm Campers
Whoa.  Sorry I slid off the radar last week.  As you know, we had a second week of Farm Camp, and it went exceedingly well.  A fine group of seven campers got to know the farm and all its inhabitants up close.  My excellent helpers came through for us, and I finished off our first real Farm Camp sessions very encouraged about next year.  I learned some things that will help me tweak it for the better, but overall, I think we did really well.  Big, big thanks to everyone who contributed!

Bandera courthouse.  Cool little town.
I had hardly put the glue sticks and construction paper away when it was time for me to help drive my teenager and four of her friends down to the Texas Hill Country for two weeks of camp.  I've made this trip twice before with another of the moms, and we always have a great time.  Because of the logistics, we got to spend the night in Kerrville before driving the kids into the camp the next day.  What a fun little vacation.  Rested, did some sightseeing of a rustic variety, and got to visit with my friend, my daughter, and all the girls.

Dogs need grooming.
And now, it's back home, with one less person in the house to look after, and just the long To Do list that has been breathing down my neck for a while.  Oh, and I'd like to re-organize every room in the house.  A bit ambitious, I know, but I can dream. 

Dyed BFL turned into yarn.
Tomorrow is a holiday, and I'm thinking of dyeing some more roving.  The beautiful BFL I dyed a couple of weeks ago has flown off the shelves, and needs replenishing.  Weather forecast for the rest of the week: Not Horrid.  Perfect for skirting and washing pounds and pounds of fiber.  Add that to the list...

And Happy Independence Day!


Color Us Delighted

Day Exceeds Most Optimistic Expectations.  That should be the headline.  What a beautiful day yesterday.  I honestly thought we'd be running back and forth between the dye pots outside and the AC in the LRB.  But it turned out to be so pleasant, that we all just camped out in our comfy spinning chairs under the trees, with our fiber and yarn perking away in the colors.


Combine the usual delightful fiber/bff time at the farm with the added drama of dye pot serendipity, and you have yourself one jolly spring day, let me tell you.


Misty's four lovely daughters (yes, they're quads) added their color sense to several of the colorways that emerged from the steamer, and they also enjoyed lovin' on the big dogs and collecting eggs.


We used several different dye methods, but they all start with soaking the fiber in soap and/or vinegar.


Ms. Amy, a high school art teacher, hand painted some roving, rolled it in plastic wrap...


...see, kind of like a cinnamon roll, and stuck it in the roaster to steam.


Beth shows off a wrapped roving about to start steaming.



She also put some fiber into the kettle to get a more monochromatic effect.  Beth likes purple...


Trying to get a shot of the cool dye solution in one of our crock pots, all I could see was the reflection of the beautiful trees overhead.


Ah, here we go... isn't this like something you'd see Harry Potter concoct for one of his classes?


Ms. Amy and I tried some solar dyeing on the front porch.  We put some fiber into vinegar water in a big pickle jar...


Added several colors in powder form...


And watched the warm solution move the dye around and around through the fibers.  This method is fun when you want to let go of all control and just let the elements do the work.


And the colors that emerged.... man... these ladies have wild imaginations.  Lots and lots of brights...


And some really luscious neutrals...


The rich colors just kept on coming!  In fact, we had such a good time, and had set up such a lovely safari Dye Camp in the back yard that I imposed on Rita to come back today to dye more fiber!



Fiber Play

While I am still plugging away on my Daybreak and Brock’s birthday socks, and pretty much letting the Birds and Dinos Cardigan languish, I have been having many other ideas of what to do with yarn lately.

Some involved turning a new find

into some new yarns

and turning a sweater that’s too big,

into a big pile of pure potential

Dye Trying

Emma's Yarn
 I'm really looking forward to Saturday - not only is it our regular Third Saturday fiber get together at the Little Red Barn, but out under the shade trees, we'll be cooking up some scrumptious color in the dye pots.  Rita and Peggy HR have offered to help by bringing some turkey fryers and crock pots, so we should have no lack of ways to get color on your fiber.

Bring what you have to dye, or get some here - yarn or roving - and we'll play.  All the gorgeous yarns at Maryland Sheep and Wool have been haunting me in my sleep, and I'd really like to experiment with some fun color combinations myself. 

The weatherman says it will be a warm sunny day, perfect for hanging out under the trees.  You might want to prepare for a few bugs... mosquitoes and chiggers have been documented here in the past couple of weeks.  I want you to be comfortable...

Looking ahead, remember we have our fleece skirting/washing workshop coming up on June 2, as well as an amazing double knitting workshop on June 9.  More details about those will be forthcoming.

See you Saturday!  10 AM to 3 PM...

Emma's Yarn becoming a hat...