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The problem is, I'm not crazy about this pale shade of yellow, so of course I'm going to enhance it with Kool-Aid. Since this is practice for self-patterning yarn, I attempted to create self-striping yarn. Yes, like those pretty Noro yarns that form solid stripes as you knit. I wrapped my yarn around a big plastic bottle, alternating 20 turns on top of the bottle with 20 turns on the bottom of the bottle, back and forth until I ended with two attached skeins, one of which was to be dyed with green apple Kool-Aid. The name of the flavor is actually arctic apple.
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Well, this is a bad shade of Kool-Aid to dye with. It turns the water very cloudy. And it didn't help that the color of my yarn was yellow to begin with, I ended up with an unacceptably pale shade of green:
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I did not have any more green Kool-Aid, but I happened to have a big bottle of BLUE mouthwash in the kitchen with me (the same bottle I had used to wind the yarn). Why, if you add blue to yellow, you get green, right? Of course, only if mouthwash coloring is taken up by wool.
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And yes, it is! I was very surprised. I wonder if any brand of mouthwash could be used to dye wool. In any case I now have self striping yarn with alternating yellow and green sections... though my green stripes will be a little spotted with yellow here and there:
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I tried to stir the yarn as much as I could to avoid the "variegated look". I guess the shallow bowl did not allow me much room. If I try this again, I'll use a much bigger bowl and I will keep squeezing the yarn with a plastic spoon, that gave me good results with my last kool-aid experiment.
Gosh, I'm starting to believe that I enjoy the dyeing much more than the knitting.
3 comments:
I love your philosophy of knitting on the cheap. I'm looking for dowling to make a spindle since I read that blog entry. And today's blog about the dying is brilliant. Thanks for sharing.
You're just too awsome, Pioggia! ^_^ That dying adventure was fun to read! I had to laugh when you turned to the mouthwash in desperation. So much fun. I'm glad to see that your ingenuity paid off! I look forward to seeing the socks you make.
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