July 23, 2013

Dyeing with Onion Skins

I have heard it said that if you dye with onion skins you will never throw them away again! I think this may be true. There is such a variety of colors you can obtain with onion skins. I would like to try a lot of different things, different mordants, different modifiers, combinations of colors and all sorts of different things. I made a dye bath yesterday using 120g of dried onion skins. I boiled them for over an hour and let the steep until cool.

I had mordanted a pound of my wool roving and a skein of super wash bare yarn. I used 8% alum and 4% cream of tarter. I simmered this for an hour and then let it stand over night. I rinsed them all before dyeing them.

I dyed the yarn first. I simmered the yarn in the pot for an hour and then let it steep until it was cool. The result was a yarn I keep calling carrot instead of onion skin! It is a beautiful color in pot and after it was rinsed!

There seemed to be still a lot of color in the pot. I decided to run some more batches using some of the roving. I got four batches (one pound) of wool dyed with that one pot. The picture below shows all four batches in succession, left to right.


I was surprised by the result. Instead of just getting lighter and lighter, the amount of orange varied with each batch as well. The third batch seemed to have more orange than either the second or fourth!

That is all the dyeing with onion skins I got done today. I did do a second boil of the onion skins and will be curious to see the results from that compared to these.

I also followed a recipes I found for making an iron and a copper mordant. The iron is made with a ratio of 2:1 clear vinegar to water with some old iron nails steeping in it. The copper mordant is a 1:1 ratio of of clear vinegar with some copper wire steeping in it. They both have to steep for several days to weeks before they will be ready to use. That will allow even more colors from the same onion skins!



July 22, 2013

A Day of Dyeing

Well after all the prep work Saturday, Sunday was dyeing day.  I had a pound of roving and 320 yards of home spun yarn to play with. My friend, Susie, got here at about 11:00 in the morning. She brought two bags of onion skins which I immediately put in a pot of water and started to boil.

(L to R: Box Elder bark, onion skins, Sow Thistle with some additions-see below, grey wool dyed with Quebracho Red).


Susie is making paper these days so I have been saving the plant material and spent dye baths for her. I dry the vegetable matter on screens and then if it something she thinks is interesting she uses it in her paper.  I had dried the Box Elder bark for Susie, but she said she couldn't use it. After boiling the Sow Thistle, we dried that and it will become part of her paper. I did a second boil on the onion skins and those will be dried for paper as well. I also have boiled red cabbage for her.


We removed the yarn from the Box Elder dye pot where it had been steeping over night.  No more color appeared to develop by letting it stand. The result is a very nice beige color. It was a lot of work for the color, so even though I like it, I probably won't do it again.  Besides, the smell was really awful!

We looked at the jar of sow thistle petals (see 7/20/13). We decided to try to get a bit more color be heating them. I simmered them in a pot for a while and the strained and cooled the liquid. I added the wool and heated it. It looked a lot like the leafy spurge wool, so I added some Cream of Tartar. The pot quickly lost much of its color! I don't understand why that would happen. Any ideas would be appreciated!

I decided that since I had other pots going, I would just play around. I added a cup of Quebracho Red dye bath and a cup of the onion skin dye bath. I let that simmer for a while longer and then cooled the pot. One thing I have learned from the dyeing I have done this summer is that unless you are attempting to get a specific color, you can't make a mistake! I have thought on occasion that I have done something to 'ruin the pot' but so far, I have not come up with a color using natural dye stuff that I don't like!

This is the yarn ready to spin. It turned into a lovely apricot color!


The last experiment for the day was to try dyeing some of my naturally grey wool. I have a fleece that is a beautiful silvery grey. I wanted to use something with a fairly strong color. I still have the dye bath from the first run of Quebracho Red. I decided to try that. At first I was disappointed with the results. It just looked as though it had darkened the yarn. After the yarn was completely dry, I realized that there is some of the salmon color of the Quebracho. It may be hard to see in the photo.

The wool on either side is the wool that was dyed. The wool in the middle is the natural color greywool. It turned out prettier than what it looks in the picture.








July 20, 2013

Dyeing with Box Elder Bark

The weather has finally cooled a bit. I decided it was time to get back to dyeing wool. I started a pot of Boxelder bark before we left for our trip last weekend. The bark has been chopped up and soaking in a pot of water for about 8 days now, 8 very hot days. Oh the smell...  I simmered the pot for an hour and let it steep while I mordanted some wool in alum. I had to simmer it on the grill outside and close all the windows and doors on that side of the house. Probably a good thing I don't have neighbors nearby! If you decide to try this, beware, you can't do this one inside, good ventilation won't be good enough!
Box Elder trees (Acer Negundo) are native trees in this area and are a member of the maple family.  The sap has been used to make syrup and various parts of the tree have been used for many different things through the centuries. When the wood is injured, it reacts by turning a red wine color.  My husband used it for that reason to make boxes for red wine we made and gave as gifts. The colored streaks in the wood matched the color of the wine.

This is what the pot looked like after simmering. You can see the size of the bark pieces. When I strained the liquid it was slightly thicker than water. It was a very rich, dark brown. I added the mordanted wool and simmered it for an hour. Then I let the wool steep for several hours. After steeping for two hours what I had was a warm, brownish tan. I decided to just let it continue to steep to see if I would get more color. 



Meanwhile, I decided to pick the heads off some of the sow thistle growing around here. I picked a bunch of the flower heads and then removed just the petals, avoiding as much of the sepals and calyxes as possible. I put all the petals into a 2 quart jar and covered them with boiling water. I left that to sit in the sun for the rest of the afternoon and overnight.Tomorrow, a friend is coming and she is bringing onion skins. The real dyeing will happen tomorrow. I have done about all the prep work I can today.

While I was wandering around the yard I spied these and picked some for the deck!









July 18, 2013

Too Hot to Dye

We have had quite a stretch of very hot, very humid weather lately. I have bark soaking to cook up for dyeing, but I can't bring myself to mess with the pots of boiling water! I am researching 'solar' dyeing. I may have to give that a try. It has also been a busy time. Two flooded basements in two weeks and a wedding far enough away we took the camper... and the dogs. Camping with the Corgis is never a problem (although, Gus needs to be carried to the camper and put inside. He doesn't seem to mind once we are going, but that first step gets to him!

This is our boy, Gus. He is eight years old. He hasn't missed many meals. He doesn't care too much for hiking. When we are camping, he prefers to sleep in a shady place and check out what the neighbors are having for supper.








Janie is the little Diva. She pretty much runs the house, and every one in it. She is eleven years old, a master manipulator, and has the other two dogs completely under her paw.  Janie doesn't care where she is, so long as 'her daddy' (my husband) is nearby.


Lula is the 75 pound baby. She is a three year old Catahoula.  She loves her people. She loves to play and has endless energy. Lula is very friendly and loves to explore. She doesn't try to be bad, she's like the bull in the china closet...everywhere. I read in one breed description that Catahoulas are very  intelligent which makes them very inquisitive about their surroundings so they do a lot of exploring. I go with that. My husband has a different idea. I love her dearly, but she is difficult to travel with. First day back she got a wonderful new kennel.

Since I haven't been dyeing yarn, I thought this would be a good time to spin up some I had finished. Here are some photos of that yarn. It is all DK weight 2ply wool.

From L to R: rhubarb leaves; Snow on the Mountain; Milkweed; Quebracho Red; Leafy Spurge; a combination of natural grey wool and Red Cabbage; Red Cabbage.

  





July 2, 2013

Quebracho Red

We have been having quite a time here. First, our sewer backed up and left an inch and a half of water in the basement. I cleaned and bleached everything and washed all the bedding and clothes. Three days worth of laundry. My dryer quit on the first day so I went out and bought clothesline and clothes pins and created a solar clothes dehydrator...


This baby has two hundred feet of line and four hundred pins... add sun, a little breeze, and it is the best solar invention ever!

So. I finished cleaning everything in the basement. Then two weeks after the first flood, we get nine plus inches of rain in a couple of hours. Now there is two feet of water in the basement. (at least it wasn't sewage this time). Back to scrubbing the basement again, rewashing the clothes, removing all the appliances and furniture. The walls come out next. Bottom line... Why am I telling you this? To explain my lack of writing. Also, I haven't been scouting the wild color lately. 

Yesterday, I decided that it was time to try something new in the dye pot.  I went to my stash. A couple years ago I took a class on natural dyeing, after which I bought a lot of natural dye stuff. Until now, I haven't used any of it. I got all the stuff together and started looking through it. I decided to try the Quebracho red dye powder.



 Quebrachea lorentzii is a tree that grows in Paraguay.  The wood is extremely hard and the bark
contains a great deal of tannin. The red dye powder is made from the bark and heartwood. A large   
range of colors is possible depending on the mordant, assist, after mordant, and the type of material              
being dyed.  I used wool roving and an alum mordant for the first run and added cream of tartar to the mordant for the second. 

I dyed three and a half ounces of wool in each run. I mordanted it in alum while making the dye bath. I put one ounce of quebracho powder in a jar and added hot tap water and stirred to make a paste. I added this to the dye pot with enough water to allow the roving to move freely. I brought the dye bath to a simmer and held it for one hour, then cooled it for a couple hours. Letting it sit for a while helps the color develop. I then added the mordanted wool and brought the pot slowly to a simmer for another hour. I left the wool to steep in the bath while it cooled over night. I then rinsed the wool until the water ran clear and washed it with Eucalan Wool Wash.   



I wanted to do a second run as there was still a lot of color in the pot.  I had another three and a half   
ounces of wool mordanted in alum. I decided to add some cream of tartar to that. I mixed it in water
in a small jar and added it to the mordant bath. I brought the pot to a simmer for about an hour and cooled it back to a temperature I could handle. I raised the dye pot temperature to match and added  the remaining roving. I simmered this for an hour and let it steep and cool for three. It came out very similar to the first batch, maybe a little more on the 'pink' side, but close enough so I plan to spin them together.

 The color I got was a beautiful salmon color. I plan to spin it into a lace weight yarn.