Showing posts with label natural dyes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natural dyes. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Hooray for the Internet!

This week's links somehow do not contain a single craft which is so rare for me but these are the things I've found most exciting around the internet!
Larabars are my go-to "energy bar" when I live in America because they are soy-free.  They are also, however, prohibitively expensive.  Why not make your own?

Trafalgar Square on From Me To You 
I love cinegrams!  These are like cheesy 90's gifs but with only select sections of the image changing, in a way that reminds me of looking at a wizard's photograph it Harry Potter.


Kitchen on decor8
I love the mesh below the sink here.  I'm fascinated with kitchens lately. 


House Tour: Greenport, N.Y. on New York Times
I'm not sure how I came across this last week, but this is about some nice folks and their house in my home village.  It makes me want to become someone who uses summer as a verb. 

Are You My Mother? by Alison Bechdel
One of my favorite authors has a new book out that I desperately want!  It's a graphic memoir about a complicated mother/daughter relationship.  I have not read it yet so the most I can say is that Alison Bechdel is always amazing and I'm sure this is, too.

Original Source: Unknown, via (Notes on) Politics
I saw this image go around Facebook yesterday but could not find the original source.  In honor of International Workers' Day, people have been talking a lot about the origin of the 8-hour work day.  This image, from whomever and whenever it has come, is a beautiful representation of what should be.



Rainbow Cake on Hostess with the Mostest
Who wants to use questionable food coloring to make a rainbow cake when you can use natural ingredients?  This cake uses beet juice, carrot juice, egg yolks, spinach juice, blueberry juice, and blackberry juice to create the rainbow effect that is so popular.  The tones are more muted than with food dye but in that way that reminds you it is food, not a package of tempera paints.  

This was kind of an eclectic mix of links this week, but I hope that means something for everyone!

Monday, April 9, 2012

Dyeing Natural Fibers with Spices

Dye Natural Fibers with Spices

A Tutorial

Over the past few weeks, blogs and Pinterest boards have been abuzz with posts about natural egg dyeing.  After we dyed our eggs with beets, paprika, turmeric, and red cabbage, it seemed wasteful to dump the extra dye down the drain.  I took a handful of un-dyed wool and put it in the yellow (turmeric) dye, then went grocery shopping.  When I came home, I found that the wool had, indeed, dyed a beautiful yellow.  I saved the rest of the yellow dye (having dumped the others because they were a bit lumpy) and decided I would try more later.  


Today, I got out some more wool and two hanks of white, cotton yarn.  I prepared the yarn for dyeing by wrapping it around a book.  I cut about 6 pieces of scrap yarn and tied it around the strands at even intervals; this way, the yarn would not become tangled while dyeing.  Here are all the materials you will need to do this at home:

-un-dyed cotton and/or wool
-turmeric and/or paprika
-vinegar
-pots
-tongs
-rubber gloves
-fine mesh or a nylon stocking


I boiled two pots of water: one for turmeric and one for paprika.  Each pot had enough water to cover the yarn.  I added a few teaspoons of spice for each liter of water and one tablespoon of vinegar to each pot.  It definitely takes a lot paprika to make a darker color, but turmeric will work with less.  I mixed the spices in well then let the water come to a boil.  I then submerged the yarn in the dye and turned the temperature to low, leaving the dye to simmer for about 30 minutes.  You could make your yarn darker or lighter by changing the amount of spice you use or changing the length of time you leave it sitting.  Remove your yarn when it is several shades darker than what you would like. 


I used tongs to remove the yarn from the dye.  Wearing rubber gloves, I washed the yarn until no more dye came out.  I set the yarn to dry in the sun.



Next up: wool!

 I covered the pot of dye with a nylon stocking and poured the dye into another pan, trying to avoid letting any of the spice mix in.  This is because I did not want any spices to stick to the wool which is much more delicate  and harder to wash than the cotton.  


Once the dye had cooled to about the temperature of bath water, I carefully submerged the wool.  Next time, I will take greater precautions to fully submerge it.  Again, I let the wool sit for about 30 minutes.  After washing, I found that this was far too short!  Next time, I will leave it for at least an hour, if not several.

After soaking, I carefully washed the wool.  The water should be luke warm--no warmer, no colder.  This prevents the wool from accidentally felting. After the water ran clean, I set the wool to dry in the sun.


The results!  Turmeric turned both the wool and the cotton a pretty bright yellow.  The paprika made the wool a pale orange and the cotton a coral pink.

I will be using the wool for needle-felting, not for wet-felting, because I do not know how well the dye will stand up to washing.  As for the cotton yarn, I will probably be using it to make brooches or accessories--again, things that do not require washing.

Want to dye other colors?  Try the same techniques used for dyeing Easter eggs (this link has a good explanation of different colors you can make)!

Next up: vegetable dyes!

-Colleen