Mood:
Topic: Weaving
My daughter is expecting my 3rd grandchild in Oct - needless to say we all are very excited! It is supposed to be a girl, so I am thrilled that I will have 3 grand daughters! So now reality hits. I started a tradition of Swedish Weaving Blessing Blankets. Beth and Sarah have one, now for another.
For those not familiar with Swedish Weave, it a very easy crafting technique. You can buy Monks Cloth just about any where and in an assortment of colors. I like using the neutral color, which is more of an eggshell than an actual white. Good to hide baby "stuff."
When working with Monks Cloth, I first sew up the raw sides on my sewing machine. If you don’t the blanket or cloth actually starts to unravel and those loose, woven threads start to unweave themselves and become knotted. If left to it's own devices, it would become a big ball of tangled string
After it is washed, it looks like this:
As you can see the strands or floats are very close together. It is in the floats that you place your yarn. First though, I need to find the middle of the material as my design is worked from the middle out. I start by folding the material in fourths, then place a safety pin where the middle is:
I then unfold it and measure again, just to be sure I have marked the middle float on the material:
Diana
I love to dye with the fruit wood, leaves, and twigs. Most of these don't need mordant because the tannins in the bark serve as a mordant. These yarns were dyed in June 2006 from leaves, twigs, and immature fruit. I had one of those small plastic grocery bags full and got some wonderful colors. This was quite a lot of color from this amount of plant material. I have about 16 ounces here. The most reddish ones were the first dye bath and were on unmordanted fiber. This probably was because the amount of dye in the water was the most. I want to experiment some more this year with this dye although I have gotten quite lovely colors last year from plum leaves and twigs. What I need is a nearby friend with a big crab apple tree in their yard. My crab apple tree is just a baby so I can't just pull off a lot of leaves and bark there yet.--
Milkweed pictured in my last post is a persistent weed around here. It is easy to see because it is taller than everything else in the field. Almost any vacant lot in my town has some and along irrigation ditches it flourishes. To use it, I pick the whole plant wearing gardening gloves. I have heard it may cause a contact dermatitis in some people so have played it safe. I have dyed with a lot of it and like the clear yellows it gives. The sample on the left is alum and the right tin. As well as using it as yellow, I over dye with light concentrations of indigo or cochineal and get lovely greens or oranges. Keep in mind that in all dyeing (even chemical dyeing) yellow is a very wimpy color easily overrun by any other color. When I took the class with Trudy Van Stralen (a once in a lifetime opportunity) she suggested dyeing with your yellows first for at least 1/2 hour and then dyeing with the light concentration of dyestuff. So that is my procedure.
I finally went to the doctor 2 days ago because I knew I was really sick when I went to my favorite gardening store and could barely walk around picking out plants. Usually I'm a gardening nutso this time of year. Our weather which has been cool held me back for a while. But it was knock down gorgeous. So I have bronchitis which makes me very sleepy. But I still bought lots of garden plants yesterday and am going to hit the beds in a few minutes. My daughter is coming over. Right now I just have a big mess on my front porch. One of my favorite things about gardening is natural dyeing. Usually I go through a massive natural dyeing phase in June when milk weed starts to bloom. It is one of my favorite local dye plants. I have to get gardening so I can get dyeing. Linda