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May 11, 2025

Dyeing and Spinning

 My friend A gave me some white roving to go with the pink she'd given me a while back.  She'd dyed some Dorset/Friesian fleece a lovely dark pink and processed it with her awesome Brother electric carder.  I sort of claimed it when she was showing me because it was really a perfect colour.   I'd spun it up and brought the full bobbin to show off at a spinning day.   She asked what I was going to do with it and I'd said I was going to find some grey to go with it and then hopefully have enough for a hat and mittens.  I think 200g should do that.  It's worsted weight though.  Anyway, she grabbed another 100g of the same fleece and gave it to me, offering me some grey dye as well.

In January the rug hookers have a silent auction and I purchased a bag of old, some really old Cushing's dyes and a book of dye recipes specifically for rug hooking.   I also have a a set of base primary colours of weak acid dyes and of fibre reactive dyes, so I figured I had enough to get a decent grey.   In the Cushing's dyes there was a packet of "silver grey", so I decided to try it and see if it worked.   

I was a little worried at first because first, dyeing roving, beautifully airy, ready to spin roving can be difficult to get it evenly dyed without any compacting or felting, and second, I'd never used any Cushing dyes before so when the dye mixed up a purple-ish colour, I wrestled with my decision.   However, I was brave and gently dribbled the dye mixture around the edges of the roving and gently lifted the roving and tilted the pan a bit to get the dye dispersed.  I was worried that I'd start felting or breaking the wet roving if I removed it from the pan.

I did a good job though.  While some of the air from the roving was definitely removed, so it's not as light and fluffy as it was, there has been no felting.  It came out of the pot with a hint of pinkish grey, by the time it dried it was a lovely grey.  

It's spinning up very nicely.   I've had no areas which were compacted and no felting, so I'm incredibly happy with both the colour and the good dyeing that I did.   I very rarely dye roving unless it's superwash, since you can't do much wrong with that in terms of felting.

The grey colour is maybe a tad uneven, but not so much that it's horribly noticeable.  Also, not really knowing how much dye I needed for 100G, since I didn't actually find the details to do the math until after everything was in the pot and simmering away made colour depth a little bit of a guessing game.  I was maybe trying for a slightly lighter grey but it's a really nice grey all the same and I'm very happy with the whole process

The grey goes so well with the pink.   As I'm plying the pink with the grey to get a marled yarn, (barber pole striping), it has a similar depth of shade so it's not overpowering and noticeable.   When this is knit up, I suspect that it will be more of a tweedy look or maybe even more of just a slightly subdued pink.  I'm really happy with the results and am looking for suitable patterns for that hat and mitten set.

2 comments:

  1. Lovely colors. I'm really glad to hear about the old Cushing dyes because I have a small collection of them from years ago!

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  2. The dye was a a bit compacted but most of it seemed fine. It took a little bit more mixing to get the compacted bits dissolved, but it wasn't horrible.
    I'm pretty happy with the finished results and am looking forward to knitting with it.

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