Showing posts with label natural dyes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natural dyes. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 September 2011

Farmers' Market and Harvest Fair

Last weekend we visited the annual farmers' market and harvest fair in Järvenpää again. We left home in rain, but were lucky to have sunshine for the time we walked through this marketplace and pedestrian area. You can see how dark the clouds were.


Farmers brought their harvest: chanterelles, potatoes, carrots, tomatoes and cabbages here, and leeks


Home made jams, juices and pickled vegetables


Flowers


and flowers


Dried flowers and straw ornaments, including straw goats for Christmas



The yarns in soft colours here in the front are dyed with plants and mushrooms (not the pink, I think!). They had yarns for knitters and woven and knitted shawls.


The weather is getting colder, and wearing these fingerless gloves would be a good idea soon.


Hand-made ceramics


Some of the Villa Cooper ladies with their wool socks, leather slippers and ceramics


Guess how many new ladies wanted to join the open college quilting class this autumn after seeing my pretty display? 0!
Really, on Thursday only one of last year's ladies joined me and the teacher in class. After the rain stopped, one more lady came and asked if she could join and not quilt but make herself a jacket, and we all welcomed her with open heart. Three is not a crowd here, so we need at least two more to be allowed to start the class for real. We just hope some of our regulars have been busy with work, grandchildren, harvest or summer cabin, and will be there next week full of energy and new ideas.

Thursday, 1 October 2009

Vintage Thingies 42 - Handicraft Magazines


... because it is Thursday. This week I will show you some of the old magazines my mother gave me to keep when I visited her. These are the Omin käsin (by hand, or by my own hands) magazine's issues from the 50's. Patterns for the loom, second from the right are bands made with tablet weave or crios techniques, and on the right some modern embroideries on wool. I remember some cushion covers my mother embroidered at that time, wool on wool.




These are newer issues, 60's to 70's. Patterns for clothes, jewelry, cross stitch ...



Here you have a chance for some neck gymnastics, blogger insists this picture should be shown rotated this way! Soft toys from mouse to elephant.


The DIY magazine on the left shows such ugly dolls on the cover that I had to hide the face of the other doll, with massive eyebrows! The next magazine is called Kaunis koti, beautiful home, and there are many patterns for curtains, table cloths and so on. Two more issues of Omin käsin, one with modern embroideries again and the one on the right shows how to dye your own wool yarn using cones, lichen, mushrooms or wild flowers. I just love the soft shades of the yarn. If you want to know more about dyeing with plants, you can read the interview I made last autumn with a sewing class friend Hanna.



This was all for this week. Go back to Coloradolady's blog and see all the other vintage thingies of this Thursday. Happy VTT!

Sunday, 5 October 2008

Dyeing with mushrooms and plants

Every Thursday for many years now I have been taking some time of my own and gone to a sewing group at the local school. In this group we have a teacher and 5 to 8 members only. We can sew our own projects, and the teacher gives individual help whenever there is a tricky problem. One of the faithful members of the group is Hanna. I knew her also through the school of our children, her two daughters were classmates of my elder son and my daughter Kaija. Hanna told us in the group that she had experimented with dyeing, and I asked for an interview so she could share her knowledge with my readers. This is my first ever interview, so I kept it really simple. Here it goes:


Q: Tell us something about you and your crafty hobbies.


A: I'm a middle-aged kindergarten teacher and I have done handicrafts and all kinds of art and creative work with my hands more or less all my life. I have tried aquarelle painting, painting silk, painting china, worked with twigs and brushwood, woven baskets with willow, tried metal wire works and small decorations of plywood, to mention some. I'm a keen knitter and I like crocheting. I also sew patchwork quilts, clothes and small fabric animals and dolls. I learned to crochet from my paternal grandmother when I was five years old; and after that I have always had some handicraft projects going. At the moment I have several unfinished projects going on. Sometimes I feel that my work is a hindrance to my hobbies. ;)


This is a photo I took last spring at the exhibition of the sewing group. The green and yellow baby quilt is made by Hanna.





She also attended another group and made these three sweet softie mice.



Q: You told me that you have dyed yarn with mushrooms. Where did you get that idea?


A: I had read in crafty blogs that you can get beautiful shades of colour to yarns with plants. My sister, who is an artist and art teacher, wanted to try dyeing paper with plants, and I became inspired to try myself. We have already agreed on a new dyeing bee for next summer at our cottage.
Q: Did you find instructions on the internet or in a book, or have you taken a course for dyeing?
A: I borrowed a couple of books from the library and searched in the nature for dyeing plants and mushrooms mentioned in them. I have not taken a dyeing course but e.g. the Dyer's Guild (Värjärikilta) in Finland organizes courses during summer time.
Q: How did you choose and find your dyestuff? Did you use a special yarn?
A: I wanted to try the plants and mushrooms which are rich in colour. It was easy to find dyeing mushrooms in autumn. I tried all kinds of suitabe dyestuff I could find. The corky fungus growths and mosses will have to wait until next year. I used the machine washable 7 veljestä yarn by Novita (75% wool, 25% polyamide). It withstands (according to other dyers) felting better than 100 % wool yarns, as the temperature reaches 80 to even 90 degrees C during the process. I used white, natural white and grey yarns.
Q: Can you mention some examples of the mushrooms and plants you used?
A: I used veriseitikki (cortinarius/dermocybe sanguinea) and verihelttaseitikki (cortinarius/dermocybe semisanguinea), which both give red tones; and nummitatti (suillus bovinus) which gives a bright yellow colour. I also used spruce cones to get a brown colour. Then I cooked my aalmost withered tagetes from the garden into a dyeing broth. They gave a really strong green and the broth smelled like berry juice. The dyeing is best done outdoors, as some of the dyestuffs are poisonous and the whole process is also very messy.

These green and yellow yarns are dyed with suillus bovinus mushsrooms, and tagetes. Photo by Hanna.


Q: Will you tell us how it all happens?
A: First I cooked the mushrooms or plants in water. Then I let it cool down. I first dipped the yarn in hand warm water and laid it then in the dye with the same temperature. Next I heated it slowly up to 60 degrees C, picked the yarn from the pot for a moment and added alum as a mordant. Then I heated the dye with the yarn up to 80 to 90 degrees C, and kept it at that temperature for about an hour. I let the dye pot with the yarn cool down to hand temperature again, and took the yarn to be washed in handwarm water. I added some vinegar in the first water, and rinsed the yarn until the water remained clear. Finally I admired the beautiful colours and waited impatiently for the yarn to dry.
The red and brownish colours are from cortinarius mushrooms and from spruce cones. Photo by Hanna.


Q: Will the colours fade in the sun or when washed?
A: I don't think the colours are as fast as in the industrially dyed yarns, but they are good enough for me. All the yarns I could use mordant for are colourfast. I also tried dyeing without mordant (as I run out of alum!), and even those yarns kept the colour when washed. However, I recommend the use of some mordant.
Q: Is it possible to dye other natural fibres, like cotton or silk fabric or paper?
A: I have only experimented with wool. I hear cotton requires more dyestuff, and I don't know about silk. My sister dip-dyed some papers, but the colour was paler than in the yarns. I don't know how permanent the colour would be.
Q: Can you give any hints for those who got inspired to try?
A: Mushrooms give the most dyestuff easily. I'm a beginner myself, so I recommend trying all kinds of material available from the nature. You must naturally not use any endangered or rare plants. Many weeds from the garden can well be used and of course the summer plants of your own garden when their season is over, like I did with the tagetes. You just need a big old pot. I bought mine at the flea market.

Thank you Hanna for sharing this with us!