A Dyeing Adventure

A Dyeing Adventure

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Last year, I dyed some yarn with Kool-Aid. I liked the yarn and the colors that I used. After Easter of 2019, I purchased some Paas kits on sale to dye some yarn. For the experiment, I used Valley Yarns Berkshire 100 Gram Hank from Webs. The wool and mohair blend is very similar to undyed Brown Sheep yarn. It’s been the base of a couple of dyeing projects that I have done – with coffee, Kool-Aid and Easter egg dye.

This time, I let my lovely assistant, my mother, pick the colors that I would use. Charged with selecting four colors, she picked some and made an educated guess as to what one would look like. To give as much a of color variety as possible I bought four of the nine packs of color to make the yarn more vibrant. When using Easter egg dye selecting the colors isn’t always easy especially with the nine pack because you don’t know what the colors actually will look like until they are mixed with the vinegar and water. For my purposes, I didn’t add any water, just four tablets of the same color and vinegar to almost the brim of the squirt bottle. The four tablets that I used ended up being a light green, a darker/Kelly green, aqua and pink. I asked my assistant if she had a preference for the color placement and she said “don’t put the greens together.”

I soaked the yarn before I squeezed out as much of the water as possible, laid the hanks on a heavy plastic bag to dye the yarn, then began. The colors were more vibrant than the Kool-Aid ones, but it could be the color choices or also that I didn’t soak the yarn I dyed with the drink mix long enough. When I had used all of the dye, I covered the hanks with the plastic, then rolled up the yarn and microwaved the roll on medium for about 45 minutes in 10 to 15 minute increments in a glass dish. Then I let the bundle rest to cool, rinsed the yarn, squeezed it out and then hung the hanks to dry.

The colors were still vibrant and didn’t fade a lot once dry. The yarn is completely dry, but I haven’t had a chance to wind it up yet. Four hanks, which is 560 yards (140 yards/100g), is enough to make a hat and a scarf. The yarn from this experiment still feels soft. As last time, one of the skeins had an interesting difference in how the colors blended in one section, so I’m reserving that bit to do the hat. The pink and light green blended to make a rust/brown section.

The fall Kool-Aid yarn dyeing experiment yielded a nice hat and scarf. One hank that was a little different and that was reserved for the hat. It worked well, the pattern that I used for the scarf curled a bit in the but I blocked it (a first for me) and the scarf looks fabulous. This was the first complete hat and scarf set that I made toward my goal this year. Thinking back, I need to look and see if I used the yarn that I dyed a couple of years ago with the Easter Egg dye, if not, I’ll have to make something.