|
|
|
Crafts |
|
|
|
Natural Dyes
- Tips For Getting Bright Colours on Wool
by Teresinha Roberts |
|
|
I will share with you some secrets
that I have learnt over the years on how you can get bright and
strong colours with natural dyes. It is vital to both prepare
the wool properly and to use tried and tested traditional natural
dyes, such as woad, weld and madder etc. Chalk may help to brighten
up some colours, whilst using rainwater is important for other
colours. There are also a couple of easy tricks that you can
use to get dark colours.
The wool
Some types of wool take colour better than others
and white Blue-Faced Leicester wool is my favourite. Yarn is
much easier to handle in the dye pot but you often get better
dye penetration on clean fleece.
Knitted
items, on the other hand, can be difficult to dye. You need about
10 litres of dye liquid for 100 grams of fibre and a 500 gram
knitted jumper would, therefore, need a very large container. |
|
|
Soaking
Whatever type of wool you use, it will benefit from
being soaked in water for at least two hours. Soaking the wool
opens up the fibres, making the wool easy to scour, mordant and
dye; the fibre is also less likely to float at the top of the
dye bath. Leaving the wool longer in the saucepan during any
of the steps below can also help to produce darker colours.
Preparation
Failure to clean wool properly is one of the main
reasons for not getting good colours from your dyes. Wool needs
to be well scoured before it is dipped in the dye pot even if
it has just been bought and looks clean. Scouring is much more
than washing; when you scour you remove grease and oils from
the fibre as well as dirt.
After
scouring the wool needs to be mordanted. With the exception of
woad and the indigos, most natural dyes do not adhere very well
to the fibres and need the help of a mordant. A mordant is a
chemical binding agent that adheres well to both the fibres and
the dye. I use alum and cream of tartar to mordant wool.
The dyes
You will get much better colour if you use traditional
natural dyes that have been tried and tested for hundreds of
years. Tropical wood dyes such as brazilwood, logwood and fustic
produce bright colours very easily. Cochineal is a very strong
dye but it produces much brighter colours if you use rainwater.
Woad, weld and madder are some
of the best European dyes. Madder likes hard water and adding
a teaspoon of chalk to a madder dye bath makes for stronger reds.
Chalk can also brighten wool dyed with weld considerably, changing
it from a dull buff to an almost neon yellow.
It can be difficult to get dark blues with woad
using a chemical vat as the Spectralite can strip the colour
from the wool as fast as it is being deposited. The secret to
very dark blues either with woad or indigo is to use a fermentation
vat rather than a chemical vat.
Master
dyers often build up the colour in layers. Rather than using
a very strong dye bath, they re-mordant the wool after it has
been dyed, and either put the wool back into the dye pot or over-dye
it using another colour.
Proportions
Instead of using, for example,
100 gram of madder to 100 gram of wool to get red, you could
try splitting the wool into three lots. Adding just the first
batch to the dye bath made with 100 gram of madder should result
in a very dark red. Take the first batch out and add the second
batch. This way you end up with a gradation of very dark to light
red, rather than an uniform medium red wool.
Easy tricks for dark colours
Adding a pinch of iron (as ferrous sulphate) at
the end of the dye bath can darken the colours dramatically.
Make sure you only use a pinch, as too much iron damages the
fibres. It is also important to wash the wool well afterwards
to remove all traces of iron.
The
easiest way to get dark colours, however, is to start with dark
wool. According to the British Coloured Sheep Breeders Association
'when coloured wool is over-dyed it develops a depth of colour
far beyond that achievable with white wool'. My favourite coloured
wools are grey Jacob's and brown Blue-Faced Leicester. This may
give you the incentive to start exploring the wool of small and
endangered breeds of sheep and even to start spinning. |
|
|
|
|
Author: |
|
Teresinha Roberts is a Brazilian-born
textile artist specialising in natural dyes. She is regularly
invited to talk to weavers, spinners & dyers, environmental and
other groups. Visit our website at Wildcolours natural dyes today!
to buy natural dyes & dye extracts
and to learn more on how grow and use natural dyes. |
|
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com |
|
Article Posted: December 4, 2009 |
|
|
|
Recommended For
You... |
Around The Web |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|