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Friday, 6 May 2005
Dyeing wool
Topic: dyeing
Starting with raw wool fleece is always appealing to me. I love the smell of fresh fleece, probably because I do not have sheep. Washing fleece is a very satisfying task.

Starting with the hottest tap water I can collect, I fill a 5 gallon pail and add about 1/2 cup liquid dish detergent (I use AJAX) and mix carefully with no suds resulting. Then I immerse about a pound of fleece in this water and let it soak for 30 minutes. Then (and this is the fun part) I dump it outside on my deck, letting the dirty water run through the boards, trapping the fleece on the deck.

Years ago, I used to do all this in the kitchen sink, but when the septic tank guy came and saw the 8" thick crust on the inside of the tank, he asked me what the hell I had been dumping down the drain?!? So, now the first two washes get dumped outside, with all the lanolin(!)and the rest of the rinses happen in the sink.

So, back into the house goes the pail (empty) and more hot water is added + detergent a second time if it needs it (and this stuff did). THEN the wet and squeezed out fleece. Another 30 minute soak, and another dump. Then a fresh pail of hotter clear water for a 30 minute soak. Then a second fresh pail of hot clear water for a second 30 minute soak.

The fleece above is the natural charcoal I am using. I repeated this whole process with the WHITE CORMO I planned to dye. Once it was clean enough to dye (get ALL the tips clean!)I proceeded as follows:

I have this great electric roaster that I bought JUST for dyeing. It holds up to 2# of wool. So, I mixed my dye (3/4 CUSHINGS DARK GREY and 1/4 PEACOCK)in water and added it to 2 cups vinegar and about a gallon of warm water in the roaster.
This gets mixed for a minute, and then the wool is immersed, with more water (warmer than the wool feels to prevent felting!) as needed to cover the wool. A slight drizzle of AJAX detergent is added (Tablespoon?) to help with bonding. Then I cooked the lot at 200*F for about 2 hours. The water looks much clearer when the dye has all been absorbed.

(If you use a microwave, this happens faster, but you have to dye in amounts that will fit into your microwave.)

Then I let the dye pot cool for 4 hours until lukewarm...dumped it out on the deck again (look out below!) and washed it in HOT SUDSY water, rinsing in HOT clear water. This final wash is ESSENTIAL to get out extra dye. If your rinse water is not clear, your dye is not set, and you need to start all over again with the cooking and the vinegar and the soap.

Posted by countrywool at 1:02 PM EDT
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Sunday, 27 March 2005
Dyeing Angora...the final result
Topic: dyeing

I tried a few color combinations, but the highlights the angora gave to this natural dark brown wool roving I had was delicious, so I carded all of it up. It ended up looking good at 35% angora. I spun a few sample yards and it is wonderfully soft. There is over a pound of this stuff on the shelf for sale at the shop as I type. I plan to bring it to the Cape Ann Spinning Retreat next weekend, along with a few other spinning blends I carded up. Most contain angora.

Sometimes being the main event is not all its cracked up to be. I really enjoy what angora contributes to a wool based yarn. 100% angora has its place, but I find that 35% angora yarns wear better on a day to day basis.

Posted by countrywool at 5:45 AM EST
Updated: Sunday, 27 March 2005 5:47 AM EST
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Thursday, 24 March 2005
Dyeing angora...day 2
Topic: dyeing
So, out of the dye bath came the angora, and I let it cool to room temp, which took 5 hours. I then rinsed it to be sure the dye had taken (!), and pulled it out to see what I got.

Mixed results. The angora on the INSIDE of the rolls did not take the dye thoroughly. I suspected I had not let it sit in the dye long enough for the dye to permeate all the way to the center of the sausages BEFORE adding heat.

So, I divided the lot into two piles...the first looked good to me:

and the second needed redyeing:


I redyed the second lot and it came out great.

Tomorrow (or soon!) I will post the results of what I am doing with this fabulous stuff!

Posted by countrywool at 9:29 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 24 March 2005 9:30 AM EST
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Tuesday, 22 March 2005
Dyeing Angora
Topic: dyeing
I do not generally dye angora. I much prefer the glorious natural bunny colors when blended with wool.

However... This past winter, Gretel was housed next to Gunther, and he, being an up and coming stud, decided to mature early and sprayed Gretel mercilessly for the past 2 weeks. Her coat was a mess and I was prepared to toss it. Then, I decided that the lovely (yet decidedly smelly) 6" staple that I sheared off yesterday was worth saving. So, I did something I rarely do: I washed it:


All the angora was encased in netting so I could lift it easily as I rinsed.


But the day was early and I decided that it was time to play with dyeing the stuff. So, I mixed up a quarter envelope of Cushings dye in TAUPE and along with a 1/2 cup vinegar, added it to a dyepot, and let it soak for an hour.


Then the angora/dye went into my dye-only microwave for a 20 minute cook time.



Tomorrow (or so)...look for the results.


Posted by countrywool at 7:15 AM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 22 March 2005 7:43 AM EST
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