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Results ad Lessons from Snow Dyeing with Acid Dyes
First Experiment (see link https://env-6061297.mightybox.site/discussion/snow-dyeing-wool-with-acid-dyes/: Blended colors randomly; spun a thin singles yarn and plyed with a thin wine-colored thread resulting in a variegated yarn, blue/purple dominated and dark in value.
Second Experiment: Used only llama fiber with Dharma dye colors not my ususal choice but high time to make friends with the other side of the color wheel. Pot #1 Yellow, Red, Magenta plus a trace of Blue. Pot#2 Yellow, Magenta plus a trace of True Black. Snow had scant moisture content so carefully added cold water to increase the dye bath for later heating. Results: two colors only (dark plum and henna) Yikes! How did this happen? Probably a mistake to add the water which may have caused the colors to mix/run together. Nice hair color though not what I had hoped for and not great for the color-sequence spun yarn I had planned. What to do? Other fiber to the rescue: no rule says it has to be snow dyed or even the same fiber. So mohair and sheep wool dyed with avocado skins and red hopi amaranth and, yes, some mandarin orange Kool Aid. I spun colors separately in sequence from light to dark and plyed with a gold polyester thread. I now have 120 yards of yarn from the first experiment and 172 yards from the second. I have a lot more to spin. The fun part about this experiment, the snow-dyeing over which I had very little control, was the opportunity to see, not what I wished were there, but what was actually there and what it could become. P.S. I love your blog on “strategies to help with frustrating projects.”
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