Posts Tagged ‘natural dyes’

Dyeing With Beans (DAYS 1 & 2)

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Ever since I saw Yarn Piggy’s lovely colours achieved from Black Bean Dye, I decided I HAD to try it for myself!

image source: flyingpigknits.blogspot.com

Can you imagine that these lovely colours came from BEANS?!?!

image source: flyingpigknits.blogspot.com

The instructions seem easy enough….

Soak the dry beans, drain the murky purply dye water off, dye the wool (no heating or anything required!)  Plus, you can eat the beans while you are waiting for the perfect colour.  There’s a bit of experimenting with fiber types and after baths of ammonia or vinegar….but I’m game to give it a go!

black beans

soaking the beans for 2 days

skein of 100% wool

mordant bath of alum for an hour

soaking in bean juice

I decided to try an ammonia dip after taking the wool out of the bean  mixture.  It turned the yarn a greenish colour.

yarn drying in the sunshine

lichen green yarn compared to the original colour

I’m really impressed at how green the yarn is!  When I did a great deal of natural dyeing 2 summers ago I always struggled to get a good green.  This is a method that will work year round and end up a great green colour.  It’s making me curious about what would happen if I dyed it first with onions and second with beans with ammonia, it may turn an even brighter green.

More yarn is in the bean juice for a longer soak.  Fingers crossed for blue this time!

FO: Puffy Mittens

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

It seems like AGES ago that I started blogging about the puffy thrummed mittens I’m making.  This weekend I finished them up, and delivered them to their new owner (who will NEVER have cold hands again!)

DSCF0106

Materials:

  • Handspun wool from Serbia, dyed brown with chestnuts.  I Love the subtle variations that kettle dying gives this wool.
  • Locks of fleece, washed in cold water to preserve some lanolin.
  • 4mm DPNs

Pattern:  Improvised.  Here are the basic notes.  (these make LARGE mittens)

Cuff: CO48 sts.  K1P1 ribbing for 20 rows.

Gusset: Begin thrumming, skipping 3 sts and 3 rows between thrums.  Increase 2 sts every 2 rows to 13 gusset sts.  Continue for 1.5 inches plain.

Hand:  Put 13 thumb sts. on holder.  CO 5 sts.  Knit for 4.5 inches.

Decreases:  Decrease 6 sts per row (2 per needle) every 2nd row.

Thumb: Pick up and knit 13 sts from holder, pick up 8 sts for a total of 21 thumb sts.  Thrum knit for 2 in.  Decrease every alternate row.

DSCF0107

Care instructions:

Washing:  Mittens wont need to be washed often, but if they DO need it, this is how it’s done…

Hand wash gently Soak in lukewarm soapy water (they are 100% wool and may felt if they are agitated in hot soapy water)

Turn inside out and dry flat (don’t put them in a dryer!)

If the thrums get matted: Turn the mittens inside out, and comb the locks gently to untangle the matted areas. (NOTE: this only works if the mittens are thrummed with locks of fleece.  If they are thrummed with roving, this will destroy the thrums….so be sure before you try it)

DSCF0108

Here’s an action shot….they DO look a little like boxing gloves don’t they!

Making Self Striping Yarn

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

I have been quite creative today, but that creativity will remain secret since some projects will be holiday gifts, and I don’t want to spoil any surprises.

In the mean time, I’ll show some creativity of another year when I learned how to make self striping yarn. That’s the yarn that became popular about 5 years ago that makes stripes and patterns without the knitter changing colours, or paying attention to a chart.

It was something I had always wondered about….how could they design sock wool so that it would make such regular stripes, and patterns. I did a little internet research, and found out how it is done!

WARNING: This project takes ALL day, your ENTIRE apartment, and gets quite messy. It is a lot of fun though.

To start with, you need yarn with a significant wool content (it accepts kool-aid/natural dyes better). If you are dyeing with chemical dyes, check to see what fibers they will work best with. I chose to use all my freezer burned frozen fruit, and other things I could find in my kitchen. Some substances work better than others. Think of what leaves a nasty stain on clothes, and it will probably be a good dye.

Step 1: Gather materials

Strawberries, Blueberries, Raspberries, Cranberries, Blackberries, Red Cabbage, Onion, Red Onion, Curry, Green Tea, Black Tea, and 100% wool from Brigs and Little (1 ply)

Step 2: Make a LARGE skein of yarn. This will be larger than any other skein imaginable. I used my entire apartment!

It took a long time to wrap yarn around all of the chairs I own, and then to tie extra strings around the skein in many places to keep it from getting tangled.

Step 3: Unhook the large skein (tied in many places so it’s not tangled), and soak it in water with vinegar and alum and cream of tartar (which makes the wool accept the dye better–I’m still not exactly sure why). Gather several mason jars, and make a water bath in a pot on the stove. The salt is to set the colour in the end.

Step 4: Take a 1-2 meter section of the very large skein, and put it in a mason jar with water and the dye. Turn the stove on. Make sure to keep an eye on the water level in the pot. don’t let it boil dry. Each 1-2 meter section will represent a stripe of color in the finished garment (socks in this case).

Step 5: It gets a bit messy dealing with the wool that is being dyed, and the wool that has been dyed, since it is all in one very large skein. Make sure the wool doesn’t burn on the stove element. Make sure that there is always water in the pot. Make sure you have some bleach to clean your stove and counter when you are done!

Keep going until all portions of the wool are dyed.

Step 6: Rinse the skein in cool salt water (to set the colour)

Step 7: Hang the yarn to dry.

This wool was knit up into socks, but I didn’t get a good picture before they ended up in the wash. It is interesting to me how they change colour when washed with laundry detergent. I think it has something to do with the pH, and the universal indicator properties of some of these fruit pigments. The colours are now more on the brown/yellow side.

I did a similar project with kool-aid, and some handspun white yarn as well.

Hanging to dry in the bathroom.

wound into a skein

If you plan it properly and start knitting the sock at the same point in the colour sequence, you’ll get a matched pair (which is important to some people!)

after two years of wear

after two years of wear, the colours have faded a little.

I wish you luck if you try this! Let me know how it turns out.

Knitting Olympics

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Olympic Torch

The Flame is in Canada

As the Olympic torch gets handed to Canada today, it is making me look ahead to the upcoming Olympic games.  I’m getting antsy, trying to choose an epic project for the Knitting Olympics.  I missed the boat in 2006, but have been in training since then.  I have already competed for Team Canada in the Ravelympics (for summer sports) in the events of “Fleece-to-Finished Fencing”, “Handspun Heptathalon”, “Mitten Medley” and “Hat Dash”.

It was the first time I’d taken a project from the dirty sheep fleece to the finished product, and when I told people about my Olympic challenge they responded with comments like “That’s pretty cool” or “I’ve never thought of doing that” or more commonly “You know…you can buy wool in a store these days”.  There is something special about making a project from scratch–taking fleece that was going to be thrown out, and with my own hands, transforming it into something useful, and quite beautiful.

It all started out like this:

Raw Fleece in the Grease

Raw Fleece in the Grease

I chose to use the white fleece (in the garbage bag) because it would give me a chance to experiment with natual dying.  I’m not sure what breed of sheep this is from, but I do know that this fleece was complete with vegetable matter (grass) and waste (sheep excrement) and grease (lanolin).

washing fleece

washing fleece

I put the fleece in my bathtub full of warm water.  I added cleanser (with a slightly acidic pH) to the water and let the dirt/waste settle out.  I drained the water several times until it stayed clear.  If you try this at home, be sure you have a filter screen on your bathtub drain–washing fleece can lead to drain clogging hairballs.

fleece drying on my balcony

fleece drying on my balcony

hanging to dry

hanging to dry

It took a day in the sunshine to dry the fleece.  I learned quickly that as fleece dries, small pieces are sometimes carried off in the breeze.  I wonder what my downstairs neighbours thought when they saw floating fleece from their balconies!

warm dry fluffy fleece

warm dry fluffy fleece

I put the dry fleece in a box, ready to start carding and spinning when the Olympics started.  I got up ridiculously early to catch the ceremonies live in Beijing.  I was kept company by my new drum carder and my spinning wheel.

and it begins

and it begins

I purchased this drum carder on E-Bay, and it works pretty well.  Some of the pieces need small repairs, but it still works much better than hand cards.  I injured my wrists carding wool with hand cards when I took up spinning, and it took 6 months before I could bear weight on them.  Good excuse not to do push-ups!  The drum carder has made fleece processing much more enjoyable.  It allows for blending of fibers or colours to create very fun variagated batts.

drum carder in action

drum carder in action

I carded through the opening ceremonies with a BIG cup of tea to keep me going.  I then started to spin a bobbin of singles, and then Navajo plied them to make a bobbin of 3 ply yarn.

bobbin 1

bobbin 1

I wound and tied the yarn into a skein on my niddy-noddy and then washed it to allow the yarn to bloom.  It is amazing how a good soak will even out the tension of the plied yarn.  The additional soaking helps to eliminate more dirt and vegetable matter.  If warm water and cleanser are used, more lanolin will be removed, and the wool will stop feeling greasy.  I’ve washed yarn in cool water before to preserve the lanolin for effect.  Wearing lanolin-laden mittens is a sure way to soften and smooth hands.  Processing the fleece and knitting with it is nice on the hands as well.

skein 1 drying

skein 1 drying

Skein 1 was put out to dry.  Some neighbours were out on balconies at this point, and started yelling out questions at me….Most were genuinely curious, asking what I was up to.  Others yelled to me that they learned to knit when they were young, or that they knew someone who used to spin.  Of course there were others with the smart comment about how it would be easier to go buy wool at the store.

dyed with onions

dyed with onions

The prospect of spinning white fleece for the duration of the Olympics, and then knitting mittens and a hat out of white fleece was starting to sound boring.  I had heard that it is possible to dye fleece with different plants, so I took on an extra challenge to experiment with local vegetation and see what colours I could produce.  Dying with onions gave me the best result.  I carded the fleece and divided up the batt into pieces.  I had been collecting the outer skins of onions for a while, waiting for this experiment.  I boiled a big pot of water, and added the onion skins to it.  I put the fleece into a mesh bag, suitable for washing delicates in the machine.  This keeps the onion skins and the fleece separate.  You do NOT want to add any extra vegetable matter into your fleece!  The water should be kept warm/hot, but not boiling as you do not want to agitate the wool and cause it to felt.

The onion skins left the wool a warm golden colour.

So…..that made me wonder….what else could I dye with?

naturally dyed wool

naturally dyed wool

I got to spinning, and over the next days I spun many small skeins of white wool, and dyed them on the stove with a variety of plants.  The orange was a result of using beets.  You’d expect beets to produce a lovely red colour, but it is a very fugitive dye, and this colour weakened over time.  The yellows came mostly from golden rod flowers, the greens were experiments with red onion skins, and red cabbage, dyed in an alkaline dye bath with a copper scrubbie in the pot.  I tried using tea and coffee as well as sumac.  I’m not sure if it is worth all the effort, but it’s nice to know that it is possible to do, and I was intrigued by the range of colours that I could achieve from locally sourced plants.

Note:  For the chemistry fans out there, different cations will cause the dye to “take” in different ways.  Alum (aluminum) tends to brighten colours, Copper (from the pot, or the addition of a copper scrubbie) tends to make the greens come out well, Iron (from the pot, or natually existing in the water) tends to “sadden” the colour to make it duller.  Also, the pH of the dye bath will affect the colour with acidic dye baths producing warmer more orange colours, and the alkaline dye bath produces a more green colour.  So, not only are you dealing with the variable of the dye plant, the local tap water, the pot you are using, the mordant (ions added to help the dye “take” in different ways), you are also dealing with additives of vinegar or ammonia.  I kept a detailed notebook with samples, but I am not sure that my experiment could ever be reliable.

Back to the project…

mitten 1

mitten 1

I knit the cuff from the 3 ply white yarn, and knit the rest of the mitten out of a 3 ply yarn (1 ply onion dyed, 2 ply white).  It is my basic mitten pattern, made to fit a man’s hand.

finished mitts and hat

finished mitts and hat

I knit the hat to match with the white fold up brim, and a cabled rib pattern toward the crown.  I was impressed with how smooth the finish product ended up.  The mittens feel silky, and not scratchy.  The hat feels more scratchy, but I think that’s just because the back of the neck is more sensitive to that kind of thing.  I was impressed with myself getting the hat and mitts made from that big pile of stinky fleece.  I finished in time too!  Gold medal for me!