Edit 01:34 12/19: ...in fact, money can be exchanged for goods and services. Someone bought all my purple yarn within a half hour of posting. As the first listing in a really obscure etsy store. ????? Not that I'm complaining, mind.
Thanks to the wonderful Eric Schmiedl (ericschmiedl.com), I now have some decent pictures! I got to see these on a very precisely color-balanced screen, so any color skew issues you may be having is between you and your monitor.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Inigo Montoya, take 2
I finished my finals on Monday... meaning I had time to spin up the rest of that bamboo and dye it. These will be going up on Etsy soon! Go check out yayprettycolors.etsy.com later today or tomorrow.
The first batch of purple was popular enough that I made some more:
Unfortunately this stuff is a bitch to photograph. This is a pretty good picture to show the variegation and color range, except that it's rather redder and darker. Blah.
Unfortunately this stuff is really hard to photograph. I'll add some pictures of it in skeins when it dries enough to be put in skeins. That might help...?
And then the nice forest green! Still not quite the shade I was looking for, but it's still quite pretty. If it turns out to be popular on etsy, I'll make another batch.
This is the best picture I have of the green, but it's still not right - the yarn is considerably greener. Argh.
The first batch of purple was popular enough that I made some more:
Unfortunately this stuff is a bitch to photograph. This is a pretty good picture to show the variegation and color range, except that it's rather redder and darker. Blah.
Unfortunately this stuff is really hard to photograph. I'll add some pictures of it in skeins when it dries enough to be put in skeins. That might help...?
And then the nice forest green! Still not quite the shade I was looking for, but it's still quite pretty. If it turns out to be popular on etsy, I'll make another batch.
This is the best picture I have of the green, but it's still not right - the yarn is considerably greener. Argh.
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
It's not easy...
One more attempt at dyeing! I was going for an emerald green, but despite putting in extra dye and letting it sit for fifteen minutes, all I got was this sort of medium grass-green that unfortunately photographs badly. It's quite pretty, just not what I wanted. Oh well... when I finish spinning this yarn, I'll give it another shot.
Saturday, December 6, 2008
My name is Inigo Montoya...
Prepare to dye. :p
Remember that lovely soft shiny white bamboo yarn I made a while ago? Now it is lovely and soft and shiny and has a COLOR.
The basic procedure goes something like this:
*(optional) Wash the yarn/fiber you're going to dye. We did this by simmering it for about ten minutes on the stove with a teaspoon of Synthrapol (it's a detergent that's supposedly good for pre-washing, although I've heard you can really use any detergent. What it's really good at is getting the dye out at the end - I can vouch for its awesomeness there.)
*Soak the yarn in a bath of salt (...lots of salt) and (optionally) something to soften the water. I used this stuff called Metaphos.
*After it's been in there for a while, mix up the dye and dump it in. So now you have an actual dyebath. Let it sit in that for a while (well, stir it too).
*Take the yarn out, dump in the soda ash (fixative), and stir it into the dyebath. Put the yarn back in.
*Stir stir stir. And then wait.
*Rinse.
*Dry.
That's about it! Well, for this particular kind of dye; I used the Procion MX reactive dyes. Other dyes have different procedures.
Really, pictures say it all.
The raw materials!
And the undyed yarn.
Another shot of the undyed yarn.
All the random chemicals and pots of dye
Washing the yarn
Washing the fiber
Yarn after pre-dye wash
Stirring around the fiber while it's getting washed. This was the trickiest part - I didn't want it to all come apart leaving me with a giant wad of fiber. It mostly held together, though.
Rinsing out the fiber after its pre-dying wash
Putting the salt in the pre-dying soak
Measuring out the Metaphos (I keep wanting to say Mephistopheles. Argh.)
Stirring the yarn/fiber in the pre-dye soak.
Dye powder still in the bottle. Surprisingly unimpressive.
Measuring out the dye
Powdered dye in the cup
Mixing up the dye solution
Fiber and yarn in the dyebath, soaking it up before we put in the fixative.
Soda ash (fixative) solution in the cup, ready to pour in
Lifting the yarn out of the dye bath so we can pour the fixative solution in and swish it around
Screw it, I have gloves on, if I'm supposed to "stir continously" for five minutes I might as well do it by hand.
After we added the soda ash, the color of the dye bath changed like whoa. That's almost blue. Woohoo, chemistry.
Fixative has been added; now we wait.
the Moment of Truth! and you can really see the color change in there.
Rinsing out the fiber
Rinsing the yarn
Rinsed.
Rinsing the roving
Note my high-technology drying setup. Yes, I am drying the roving on my doorknob.
Wet yarn hung up to dry. Yup, there's my spinning wheel in the background.
Remember that lovely soft shiny white bamboo yarn I made a while ago? Now it is lovely and soft and shiny and has a COLOR.
The basic procedure goes something like this:
*(optional) Wash the yarn/fiber you're going to dye. We did this by simmering it for about ten minutes on the stove with a teaspoon of Synthrapol (it's a detergent that's supposedly good for pre-washing, although I've heard you can really use any detergent. What it's really good at is getting the dye out at the end - I can vouch for its awesomeness there.)
*Soak the yarn in a bath of salt (...lots of salt) and (optionally) something to soften the water. I used this stuff called Metaphos.
*After it's been in there for a while, mix up the dye and dump it in. So now you have an actual dyebath. Let it sit in that for a while (well, stir it too).
*Take the yarn out, dump in the soda ash (fixative), and stir it into the dyebath. Put the yarn back in.
*Stir stir stir. And then wait.
*Rinse.
*Dry.
That's about it! Well, for this particular kind of dye; I used the Procion MX reactive dyes. Other dyes have different procedures.
Really, pictures say it all.
The raw materials!
And the undyed yarn.
Another shot of the undyed yarn.
All the random chemicals and pots of dye
Washing the yarn
Washing the fiber
Yarn after pre-dye wash
Stirring around the fiber while it's getting washed. This was the trickiest part - I didn't want it to all come apart leaving me with a giant wad of fiber. It mostly held together, though.
Rinsing out the fiber after its pre-dying wash
Putting the salt in the pre-dying soak
Measuring out the Metaphos (I keep wanting to say Mephistopheles. Argh.)
Stirring the yarn/fiber in the pre-dye soak.
Dye powder still in the bottle. Surprisingly unimpressive.
Measuring out the dye
Powdered dye in the cup
Mixing up the dye solution
Fiber and yarn in the dyebath, soaking it up before we put in the fixative.
Soda ash (fixative) solution in the cup, ready to pour in
Lifting the yarn out of the dye bath so we can pour the fixative solution in and swish it around
Screw it, I have gloves on, if I'm supposed to "stir continously" for five minutes I might as well do it by hand.
After we added the soda ash, the color of the dye bath changed like whoa. That's almost blue. Woohoo, chemistry.
Fixative has been added; now we wait.
the Moment of Truth! and you can really see the color change in there.
Rinsing out the fiber
Rinsing the yarn
Rinsed.
Rinsing the roving
Note my high-technology drying setup. Yes, I am drying the roving on my doorknob.
Wet yarn hung up to dry. Yup, there's my spinning wheel in the background.
Yarn straight off the drying hook. It's kinda snarly still.
Yarn after re-winding into a fresh skein. The color didn't come out quite right in this picture, sadly.
Finished yarn. This is the only picture that comes even close to capturing the color - it's this gorgeous glowing deep amethyst.
Finished roving (the color came out better on this one)
Yarn after re-winding into a fresh skein. The color didn't come out quite right in this picture, sadly.
Finished yarn. This is the only picture that comes even close to capturing the color - it's this gorgeous glowing deep amethyst.
Finished roving (the color came out better on this one)
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