Saturday, December 19, 2015

Peacock overshot pattern weaving




Tuesday, July 28, 2015

milky merino wool fabric

site for nice merino fabric from Australia
http://www.milkymerino.com/page4.htm

Monday, March 16, 2015

Rust Dyeing on the Coast

Sept 9….Rust Dyeing Workshop with Lisa Grey cotton, silk, polyester, paper---spray surface with vinegar, press, press press rusted objects onto surface, cover with plastic, lay in sun, paint with tea solution (guar gum tea solution after, or lemon juice guar gum)
Water + time straight vinegar faster rusting



Gardens and Weddings a colorful Yarn

Leftover plants from Wedding bouques yield some lovely color

 Black-Eyed Susan and Coreopsis flowers....Alum mordant

Grevillea robusta leaves...alum mordant

Canned Spring Dyebaths

Many times I find great botanical materials, but I am  not set up to use them right away.  I had this idea today that maybe canning them would preserve the dye color for future use.  I put the plant material and a Tbsp. of vinegar in a jar and filled it with water.  They are now boiling for 10 minutes in a canner.  I am hoping that this will preserve them, render the color, and keep them from fermenting until I am ready to use them.  I put a skein of alum mordanted wool in the one with the Scotch Broom flowers.

India Flint has used the canning method for dyeing material..I have tried that, but sometimes the plants come before the material is ready to be dyed.

4 jars ready to go in the canner


Skein of wool with Scotch Broom flowers



Scotch Broom Leaves


 Loquat Leaves....Green, Brown, Yellow


Bronze Fennel Leaves


After the 10 minute boiling...left to right, Scotch Broom Leaves, Loquat, Wool and Scotch Broom flowers, Bronze Fennel



I hope the colors will deepen as the jars sit, and that the plant material will not start to compost.  We'll see.  The bronze fennel seems to be a beautiful copper bronze, but it will probably change.  I see already that I need to put more material in...really stuff the jars i.e. the jar with Scotch Broom Leaves.

I am hoping this will be not only a good way to preserve dye plants for awhile, but also an easy low-key method to experiment with various potential dye plants.




Friday, December 19, 2014

Eco Printing Mystery Fabric with leaves and logwood

Trying to master the technique of ecoprinting on these cheap "Pashmina" scarves I bought on ebay....labeled 70% wool/30%, but I don't think so.  First one I did, I treated like protein, mordanting it in alum.  It took dye very weakly, so I redyed it using a soy mordant followed by and iron dip, pre-bundling.
That worked well, so I tried it again, eliminating the first alum mordant, and just going with the soy, followed by the iron.
I am happy with the results...this is a present for a friend who has been admiring the first "mistake".
I got fairly good definition, and I like the subtlety of shades.  It feels like wool, and is easy to wear.







Thursday, August 29, 2013

Sticky Lavender Geranium a fine plant for natural prints

As I get further into this adventure of searching out plants that will make a lovely natural dye or print, I find that sometimes the best and most interesting are just under my feet.  I have had this plant in my garden for many years, enjoying it sometimes and, at times, disparing of it's rather messy look after blooming. I am looking now for my nature print project for interesting leaves, and after a search on the internet and in a wildflower book, I found the identity of the mystery plant, commonly called Sticky Lavender Geranium. This self-sowing geranium has large palmate leaves, very different from other geraniums.  I was so surprised and pleased from my first prints, which are on cotton tee shirts...big, bold leafy prints. I have some bundled on a silk chiffon scarf.  I will post the results when it has cured for a bit.

Geranium viscosissimum




Onto cotton tee shirts with Cotinus, Eucalyptus, and Cochineal