Jacquard Acid Dyes |
I tried two different techniques: Hot and Cold Pour Dyeing.
With Cold Pour (sorry, I should have taken more pictures) you can quite literally paint the yarn, as it is all laid out before you on plastic. I had "autumn" in mind as a colorway and used chartreuse, russet, pumpkin orange, sun yellow and teal. I panicked briefly once I got the colors all applied that it looked more like an exploded Rastafarian than autumn leaves, but have learned from past dyeing experiments that colors blend more in the final stages and panic is not a worthy expenditure of energy.
Once the yarn was all painted, I wrapped it up in its plastic and steamed it in my dye kettle. Briefly I found myself wondering what the temperature tolerance of plastic wrap is and had visions of pulling out shrink wrapped yuck. Amazingly, plastic held its form and the colors did blend more. I got an amazing spectrum of tones from browns to purples mixed in with varying hues of my dominate choice colors. I have 245 yards of gorgeous worsted weight in "Autumn" just waiting to become a... not sure yet, but I'd venture to guess a hat.
Total Yarn Porn! Tell me that doesn't make you want to break out the face mask and rubber gloves and dye your own! |
In Kettle - I took this photo just after adding the dyes. Isn't it beautiful! |
For this batch I used chartreuse, periwinkle, sapphire blue and teal - sea glass tones. I got a little nervous while the yarn/dye mixture simmered, idly wondering if yarn could burn onto the pan. Low and behold, it didn't, the dye exhausted just as it would have in my microwave and out came a glorious 930 yards of fingering weight in "Sea Glass". Now I just need to find the PERFECT shawl pattern to highlight the colors of this yarn. Suggestions welcome.
I love this! What a great way to showcase such beautiful colors.
ReplyDelete