Showing posts with label dying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dying. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Last minute, as always

Sheep and Wool season again! Yaaay!

This year I invited my grad school classmate Ammon and his family to the festival. When I learned that they could come, I decided to knit their baby #3 a pair of booties.

I've been eyeing Duck Socks in the new Knitty, and decided to give that a go. The instructions said it takes one skein of Shibui Sock (~200 yds), so I religiously followed it and dyed up about 250 yards of Valley Franklin:


Recipe for 250 yards: 60 drops yellow; 2 drops red; 1 drop green.
splash of vinegar (1/4 cup or so)
Dipped kettle-style in turkey pan.
Cooked in oven @ 250F for 2 hours.


So cute!
Ta dah!

Pattern:: Duck by Jeny Staiman
Size:one for 3 mo.-6mo.
Yarn:Valley yarn Franklin
Yardage:90yds
Needle:US1.5 DPN
Mods:none really. I used DPNs because I don't have circulars that small. My turkish cast-on was little wobbly, but it will do. Next time, I'm going to study the youtube video that accompanied it in ravelry. I think there's enough yarn to make another pair.


Juliana (mom), Ammon (dad), and Ryley (big sis) were pretty pumped. Jensen (big bro) was indifferent. I think Evelyn (baby in photo) was upset that her feet got really hot all of the sudden.

It was so nice seeing them! We need to hang out more often!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Dying Yarn with Tobacco



For Asher's birthday I told him that I'd knit him a new pair of socks. He was sort of weary until I mentioned "tabi" socks. Then he was very interested, and offered an idea to dye his yarn with tobacco leaves. Before we get started, please rest assure that we don't smoke or chew any tobacco.

So here we go!

First he had to clean the other gunk that was on my dying pan
(like tabacco is less gunky than food coloring.)

That's the make he chose. We used the entire bag.

We later learned that there's added sugar in chewing tabacco.
Bleh. Sweet leaves.


Tabacco leaves into the pan
Note: If you are going to do this, put the leaves in cheesecloth.
I'm still picking out dried leaves from yarn.

We let it steep for a bit ~1.5 hours. The water got really dark, and we did our best to get the leaves out. (Didn't work very well. see above.)

Added some vinegar to the mixture (probably around 1/2 cup)

The yarn is Valley Franklin undyed ~400 yds or 100g.


Here it is after cooking for ~2 hours. The water isn't quite exhausted, but the yarn is a nice caramel color.

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No pictures of yarn being washed because my hands were covered in bits of tabacco leaves.
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Dried and skeined. Little bit lighter than expected, but the dye is very even and pretty.

Tabi socks, here we go!


Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Not Bad for First Time



On Sunday we thought it would be nice to try a little yarn dying using food coloring and vinegar:

We had two skeins of natural colored superwash wool: one skein worsted weight and one skein fingering weight. The worsted weight wool is going to be a beanie and the fingering is going to be...socks.




We had some trouble finding boxes of food coloring. Finally we found a box of four bottles at Kroger. Our aim was to mix 1tsp of food coloring for every 1 tablespoon of vinegar.



Since we are total beginners, we started out with 1/2 tsp of red, 10 drops of blue and 4 drops of green. That totaled to about 1 tsp. We added 1 tbs of vinegar and about 1 cup of water.

To see how dark the food coloring was, we dipped little bits of paper towel into the dye mixture and checked how the dye was looking.

We were aiming for wine-red, so we added a little green to mute the color. Yay color theory.

***

While we were busy mixing colors, the yarn waited patiently in the pot. We did not add any vinegar to the water mixture. The water in the pot is slowly getting warm to prepare the yarn for the dye. When the water is steaming but not bubbling, we got the dye ready to go.





Happy mixing dye! mmm food coloring tastes like easter eggs!



And here is the moment we have been waiting for! Ready to pour in the dye!



We were AMAZED to see how quickly the dye was sucked into the yarn! Now the yarn had areas with really dark colors and areas with no color at all! Yikes!




We quickly mixed 1 full tsp of red, 20 drops of blue and 8 drops of green. The we mixed that with 2 tbs of vinegar. This time, we slowly poured in the dye a little at a time...





Aaaah that's better. The red is like a blackberry red. We let the yarn simmer in the pot, covered for about 30 minutes. We then let it cool to room temperature and gave it a good rinse.


The yarn color looked darker when it was wet!




And here it is, all dry and ready to be knit!

Not bad for first time!




*****


For the fingering weight yarn, we used a different method: massaging dye into yarn with fingers and cooking it in the oven for 2 hours. Unfortunately we don't have too many pictures from that session (it was not as messy as you would think). Here are some pictures:





Yellow: 1/2tsp yellow; 3 drops blue
Blue: 1/2tsp blue; 10 drops green
Green: 1/2 tsp green; 5 drops green
I added about 4 1/2 tbs vinegar for the entire skein (100g)




It was a really fun experience! I would definitely like to try again soon! But first, I must find out how they knit up!