I am finally awake and I've gotten around to wind up and photograph all the yarn I've been dyeing over the last week or so! So much fun new yarn and so many fun few colors!
First off, we have the Gloss DK yarn from Knit Picks that Brooke sent me. It's so pretty and soft, I was scared to dye it, in case I messed it up, but I love the outcome! With two packs of Kool-Aid Lemonade and half a pack Lemon Lime, I got these fantastic colors, variating from minty green to neon green! Fits my life so perfectly!
Right after I finished up dyeing this skein, I dipped two skeins of Bomull Sport cotton in bleach and got these amazing colors! A much better result than my first bleaching cause these don't go to white.
So I then decided to try and bleach a different cotton brand that has a totally different feel to it. This was a skein of Bernat Handicrafter Cotton that I recieved from Star during Secret Santa. It turned into these amazing camo colors which I really love.
And at last, we got the tea dyed yarn. I've wanted to try this ever since I started dyeing, the result was better than expected, tough, I wish that the herb one would turn out better. Bottom left is green tea on Safirgarn, 100% new pure wool yarn. Bottom right is black tea, also on Sarfirgarn. The one on top is herbal tea on Karisma from Drops, 100% wool, superwash treated.
So, maybe I should start using some of the stuff I've dyed and bleached now before I do more? Yeah... My shelf behind me is getting stuffed...
Showing posts with label kool-aid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kool-aid. Show all posts
Friday, March 21, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Yarn dyeing in the making!
I am currently, right now, dyeing and bleaching some yarn! Since I was late with St. Patties, I decided to make up for it by doing some green dyeing!
So I recently got around to try the Lemon Lime Kool-Aid, and at first it tasted like a knock-off 7up, but as I kept drinking, it got worse and worse and I couldn't even drink half of the bottle I made (for your information, I make half the package at the time, I just don't have a big enough container). So I put the rest of it aside for some yarn dyeing!
And tonight I started it! The yarn I decided to torture today was the Knit Picks Closs DK skein I recieved from Brooke. It's a merino/silk blend and super soft and I kinda want to make myself some fingerless mittens or something like that with it.
I used only half a package + two packages of Lemonade. I wanted a more difuse and spotty greenish tone, so I mixed a little Lemon Lime into the Lemonade and poured it over, then I went over again with the rest of the Lemon Lime and finished it up with the second Lemonade package. Lemonade is super light yellow color and hardly did much to the yarn by itself, so that's why I used double.
Fun times! I'm currently just waiting for it to cool down...and in the mean time, I started bleaching some cotton! I dug through my bag of cotton yarn and pulled out two more Bomull Sport, this time in orange and deep magenta color.
I let them sit for about 20 minutes this time, and the result is much better. It took a while before it started to change the magenta one, but the orange showed some result pretty quickly. In the end, the magenta got a very subtle gradient over to a lighter hot pink while the orange got all firey!
And I decided to do a little experiment at the end. I got three skeins of some cotton yarn I've never used before from Star during LAC's Secret Santa exchange. They're called Bernat Handicrafter Cotton and is alot thicker and more corse than the type of cotton I'm used too. Kinda want to try and make crochet dishcloths with them...
Two shades of green and one variegated. The darkest green seemed a little boring on its own, so why not try and bleach that too? I squeesed out as much of the leftover bleaching liquids from the two Bomull Sport skeins and dipped it in, not expecting the best of results since it was second use bleach. But any result at all would be noteworthy for me, and it would brighten up the color anyway.
It didn't show much promise at first, but when I got to wet the whole skein and rinsing it off, it gave me a kinda camo result. I love it!
I'll probably blog about these to show of the final result when they're all dry and purrty, so stick around! In the mean time, you can read more in detail about Kool-Aid dyeing and cotton bleaching earlier in my blog from the last time I did it!
So I recently got around to try the Lemon Lime Kool-Aid, and at first it tasted like a knock-off 7up, but as I kept drinking, it got worse and worse and I couldn't even drink half of the bottle I made (for your information, I make half the package at the time, I just don't have a big enough container). So I put the rest of it aside for some yarn dyeing!
I used only half a package + two packages of Lemonade. I wanted a more difuse and spotty greenish tone, so I mixed a little Lemon Lime into the Lemonade and poured it over, then I went over again with the rest of the Lemon Lime and finished it up with the second Lemonade package. Lemonade is super light yellow color and hardly did much to the yarn by itself, so that's why I used double.
Fun times! I'm currently just waiting for it to cool down...and in the mean time, I started bleaching some cotton! I dug through my bag of cotton yarn and pulled out two more Bomull Sport, this time in orange and deep magenta color.
I let them sit for about 20 minutes this time, and the result is much better. It took a while before it started to change the magenta one, but the orange showed some result pretty quickly. In the end, the magenta got a very subtle gradient over to a lighter hot pink while the orange got all firey!
And I decided to do a little experiment at the end. I got three skeins of some cotton yarn I've never used before from Star during LAC's Secret Santa exchange. They're called Bernat Handicrafter Cotton and is alot thicker and more corse than the type of cotton I'm used too. Kinda want to try and make crochet dishcloths with them...
Two shades of green and one variegated. The darkest green seemed a little boring on its own, so why not try and bleach that too? I squeesed out as much of the leftover bleaching liquids from the two Bomull Sport skeins and dipped it in, not expecting the best of results since it was second use bleach. But any result at all would be noteworthy for me, and it would brighten up the color anyway.
It didn't show much promise at first, but when I got to wet the whole skein and rinsing it off, it gave me a kinda camo result. I love it!
I'll probably blog about these to show of the final result when they're all dry and purrty, so stick around! In the mean time, you can read more in detail about Kool-Aid dyeing and cotton bleaching earlier in my blog from the last time I did it!
Labels:
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Sunday, March 2, 2014
Kool-Aid dyed yarn!
Ever since I heard this was possible, I've been eager to try it out, but sadly we don't have Kool-Aid here in Norway. Lucky for me, my friend Pickle decided to send me a bunch of packs to try out!
Even though I like the concept, Kool-Aid ain't the thing for me it seems like. The few I've tasted so far haven't been all too good. I haven't tried them all yet, so I might like some of them, I just gotta get to actually try them... But still, there was some that I didn't like, and since I got multiple packages, I decided to use some of them for yarn dying!
So, last night, after watching a bunch of videos about the prosess, I decided to give it a go! Now, I didn't have much white yarn to choose from, so I took two skeins of beige, thinking that I could maybe use it for socks later on. These are Trysil Garn Superwash from Europris. I chose superwash just in case. I don't trust pure wool in warm water no matter how little I'm going to touch it.
The important thing to remember when dying yarn is to use animal fibers. The colors won't stick to synthetics. While cotton and bamboo is natural, they still won't suck up too much of the colors, so the best way is the animal way; wool, alpaca, merino, mohair. Another thing, blended yarn will only partly get colored. If you're trying to dye a 70% wool, 30% nylon yarn for an example, the nylon strands will not get colored, while the wool fibers will, and it may give a cool effect.
I decided to try the cake method. Usually you want them in loose tied skeins to get the color as evenly spread as possible, but I saw this one woman using yarn cakes to get an uneven color through the skein, which I think gives a pretty effect. I winded up the two skeins and tied them up with some acryllic yarn just in case.
To get the color all through the skein, I put them in room temperature water for about 20 minutes. Usually with yarn dying, you want to add some vinegar to the water at this point, or else the color wont stick very well. But since Kool-Aid is so danged acidic allready, it's not needed here.
After a good soak, I put the cakes in a microweave safe container.
As colors, I decided to blend several Kool-Aid flavours just to test things out. I was dying two skeins and they weren't all white, so the color needed to be more intense. I've allready made a test chart of the colors I had avilable, and decided to go for a mix between Tropical Punch and Strawberry. I had half a package of Tropical Punch lying around so I used up that one first. Thinking that it wouldn't be enough color, I had a package of Black Cherry at hand for the second round of dying, just in case.
First I added water to the box containing the cakes, I covered them about 3/4 or so. Then I mixed out the Kool-Aid in a different container, just to see the color, before I poured it over the cakes. And the yarn sucked up the color IMMEDIATELY! Even before I could stick them in the micro, the skeins were blood red and the water was getting clear allready! Crazy stuff!
I covered the box with some plastic foil and put the timer on 2 minutes at the warmest level. Then I checked the water, stirred a little and let the yarn rest for a few minutes before I zapped them again for another 2 minutes.
After four times in the microwave, the water still wasn't clear, but after another time, I figured that it probably wouldn't get clearer. I used crazy vibrant red color, so I shouldn't expect it to get all clear. But usually, you know your yarn is finished dyed when the water turns clear.
Then I let the cakes sit in the water until it had cooled, before I took them out and washed them up with some mild soap. Do not let the yarn go from warm to cold water too fast. It will shock the fibers and the yarn will felt.
After a good rinse, I squeesed out as much water as possible before placing them on a towel to soak up some more of the moisture. Afterwards I let the air dry over night.
As you can clearly see in this last picture, the dye didn't go through all of my yarn...which I originally didn't want, but I still want some more color than this. Right now, the yarn is self striping pretty much. So I rolled both skeins up to a cake again and I will try to dye them again with the Black Cherry one to hopefully get ridd of more beige that way.
I will keep you posted on that matter though, but for now, I think this blogentry has been long enough... See you all next time around!
Even though I like the concept, Kool-Aid ain't the thing for me it seems like. The few I've tasted so far haven't been all too good. I haven't tried them all yet, so I might like some of them, I just gotta get to actually try them... But still, there was some that I didn't like, and since I got multiple packages, I decided to use some of them for yarn dying!
So, last night, after watching a bunch of videos about the prosess, I decided to give it a go! Now, I didn't have much white yarn to choose from, so I took two skeins of beige, thinking that I could maybe use it for socks later on. These are Trysil Garn Superwash from Europris. I chose superwash just in case. I don't trust pure wool in warm water no matter how little I'm going to touch it.
The important thing to remember when dying yarn is to use animal fibers. The colors won't stick to synthetics. While cotton and bamboo is natural, they still won't suck up too much of the colors, so the best way is the animal way; wool, alpaca, merino, mohair. Another thing, blended yarn will only partly get colored. If you're trying to dye a 70% wool, 30% nylon yarn for an example, the nylon strands will not get colored, while the wool fibers will, and it may give a cool effect.
I decided to try the cake method. Usually you want them in loose tied skeins to get the color as evenly spread as possible, but I saw this one woman using yarn cakes to get an uneven color through the skein, which I think gives a pretty effect. I winded up the two skeins and tied them up with some acryllic yarn just in case.
To get the color all through the skein, I put them in room temperature water for about 20 minutes. Usually with yarn dying, you want to add some vinegar to the water at this point, or else the color wont stick very well. But since Kool-Aid is so danged acidic allready, it's not needed here.
After a good soak, I put the cakes in a microweave safe container.
As colors, I decided to blend several Kool-Aid flavours just to test things out. I was dying two skeins and they weren't all white, so the color needed to be more intense. I've allready made a test chart of the colors I had avilable, and decided to go for a mix between Tropical Punch and Strawberry. I had half a package of Tropical Punch lying around so I used up that one first. Thinking that it wouldn't be enough color, I had a package of Black Cherry at hand for the second round of dying, just in case.
First I added water to the box containing the cakes, I covered them about 3/4 or so. Then I mixed out the Kool-Aid in a different container, just to see the color, before I poured it over the cakes. And the yarn sucked up the color IMMEDIATELY! Even before I could stick them in the micro, the skeins were blood red and the water was getting clear allready! Crazy stuff!
I covered the box with some plastic foil and put the timer on 2 minutes at the warmest level. Then I checked the water, stirred a little and let the yarn rest for a few minutes before I zapped them again for another 2 minutes.
After four times in the microwave, the water still wasn't clear, but after another time, I figured that it probably wouldn't get clearer. I used crazy vibrant red color, so I shouldn't expect it to get all clear. But usually, you know your yarn is finished dyed when the water turns clear.
Then I let the cakes sit in the water until it had cooled, before I took them out and washed them up with some mild soap. Do not let the yarn go from warm to cold water too fast. It will shock the fibers and the yarn will felt.
After a good rinse, I squeesed out as much water as possible before placing them on a towel to soak up some more of the moisture. Afterwards I let the air dry over night.
As you can clearly see in this last picture, the dye didn't go through all of my yarn...which I originally didn't want, but I still want some more color than this. Right now, the yarn is self striping pretty much. So I rolled both skeins up to a cake again and I will try to dye them again with the Black Cherry one to hopefully get ridd of more beige that way.
I will keep you posted on that matter though, but for now, I think this blogentry has been long enough... See you all next time around!
Labels:
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kool aid,
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kool-aid yarn dye,
red,
strawberry kool-aid,
tropical punch kool-aid,
wool,
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