hand-dyeing

Gail Callahan, Storey Publishing, ISBN 978-1-60342-468-4, $18.95

I’m fascinated by dyeing threads and have dyed my own thread and canvas at various times. But most books on dyeing are frustrating to me because they deal with dyeing in quantities too large for the small amounts needed for stitchery.

If I’m thinking about dyeing 5-10 yards or a 16″ square piece of canvas, a book on dyeing 2 yards of fabric or enough wool for a sweater won’t help me.

One of the great things about Callahan’s book is that she understands and encourages dyeing in quantities this small. Her idea of dyeing mini-skeins is perfect for needlework.

I also love that she uses a wide-variety of techniques and types of dyes. The book is not, as many dyeing books are, a set of recipes without much background or ways to experiment. Instead, from the beginning, it encourages experimentation, and assumes that you, as a home dyer, ar looking for the unique.

She’s open about her failures and also talks about ways to recover from them.

The book begins with several introductory chapters on dyes and dyeing. In one of them is one of my favorite techniques, “Playing with Grocery-Store Dyes,” which uses food coloring and spices to dye. The final introductory chapter is about color, concluding with a method to dye your own color wheel.

The heart of the book is her no-fear dyeing technique. Grocery-store dyeing and monochromatic multi-colors were covered in the early chapters. This section blossoms with 17 different methods to dye yarn and fleece. Some of these use loose thread, and some use yarn on cones and could be adapted to threads on spools, in balls, or in skeins.

They are also innovative, adapting fabric techniques, such as tie-dye, and even cheese-making techniques )mozzarella balls) to make unusual threads.

The book concludes with a small selection of patterns for using your yarns.

It’s a delightful book, a great jumping off place for home-dyeing, and very useful for the stitcher.

Related posts:

  1. Hand-dyeing Threads
  2. Colorful Stitches with Overdyed Threads – book review
  3. New Canvaswork – Book Review
  4. Ultimate Big Book of Finishing, Needlework Knowledge and Techniques – book review
  5. How Much Yarn Do I Need?

Read the rest here:
Hand-dying Yarn and Fleece – book review

Can you guess the wool used here?


Renaissance Dyeing makes a lovely line of crewel-weight wool. It’s very soft and is naturally dyed. Those of your who know something about dying will know that bright modern colors are not something you expect from fibers dyed with plant and animal material.

Those bright colors are something we associate with the chemical dyes around for about 150 years.

I always thought of Renaissance’spalette as muted, but simply lovely. So imagine my surprise when my friend Karen Milano owner of The Nimble Needle in New Jersey created this bright palette using these threads for a client. It surprised her, but they are just perfect.

Read all about it in this post.

Related posts:

  1. Hand-dyeing Threads
  2. Ty-Di Threads
  3. Plying Hard-to-strip Threads
  4. The Great Kool-aid Dyeing Experiment
  5. Needlepoint Rugs — Threads

Visit link:
An Unexpected Choice of Threads

gloriana lorikeet wool thread

Gloriana’s Lorikeet hand-dyed wool is one of my favorite threads. But it has two strikes against it when it comes to plying it for stitching. First, it is a very soft wool (of course, that’s one of the things I like best about it). Second, it’s hand-dyed. Both of these things make the wool more likely to have fibers that catch each other. When carried to extremes, this is what turns wool into felt, but here is just means you need to take care.

This topic has gotten a fair amount of discussion lately. Amy Bunger has developed a wonderful method to strip and ply this thread. Knack shares this (with pictures) on her blog.


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Related posts:

  1. Needlepoint Rugs — Threads
  2. Hand-dyeing Threads
  3. Needlepoint & Social Networking
  4. Ty-Di Threads
  5. Renaissance Dyeing – thread review

Go here to read the rest:
Plying Hard-to-strip Threads

I just got word that Crescent Colours is adding new colors and a new thread to their hand-dyed line.

Coming out later this month there will be new colors in cotton floss, silk and #5 perle. They will also be bringing out a line of #8 perle with 30 colors.

Crescent also publishes cross stitch charts and there will be some new series in these.


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Related posts:

  1. New Threads
  2. Great Thread – Sassa Lynne
  3. Hand-dyeing Threads
  4. Ty-Di Threads
  5. Thread News — TNNA Preview

Read the original:
Thread Alert – New Colors & Threads from Crescent Colors