Hot Bundles from the dye pot

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Great stainless steel asparagus pot and basket works great.
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Out of the pot and cooled off for a few days.
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Let the magic be revealed. This piece was rust dyed cotton bundled with dogwood leaves.
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Some successes in the first pot. The silk is intriguing but didn’t print as well as the rust dyed cottons.

Wool dyeing Days

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Italian Mohair Salvaged from the critters
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9 skeins of 40 grams in the dye pot and drying on the rack
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Overdyed commercial wools all in the same olive colored dye pot.

 

Dyeing Black with Rit Dye

NO, this isn’t a what’s for dinner post. Although, this is my most favorite sherbet and brand of cottage cheese.  We save these containers for use to store Beneful for the pups in small quantities that are easy to take along if we go on a trip. But they also get confiscated for use in the studio, too.   The box of Rit dye is Black. A local store had a basket of black Rit marked for less than $1 so I stocked up. Black is such a hard color to dye.  MX dyes can be cantankerous so I figured what did I have to loose by trying these out.  

 I am getting ready to start a quilt to jury  for the Pet Project special exhibit at Houston and I need a lot of variations of black. This was a perfect time to try this cheap Rit dye.  

The first photo is a piece of high thread count cotton that started as the palest taupe color that is not quite white. I bought an entire roll a couple of years ago for $5 at a yard sale. It has a wonderful hand and dyes beautifully. I used it almost exclusively for indigo dyeing a couple of years ago and loved the results.

The next piece I used was a pale tan piece of dupioni silk. That is shown in the bottom picture with my toes and at the left next to the cotton. The silk actually came out darker but I love them both. 

So here is what I used the containers for.  The cottage cheese container was used to pre-mix the powdered dye in 1 cup of boiling water.  Then I used the sherbet containers for the fabric. I added salt to the container for the cotton; about 1/2 C and 1 C boiling water before I scrunched the fabric in. For the silk piece I added 1/2 C vinegar and 1 C boiling water before scrunching the fabric. 

 Then I took the pre-mixed Rit and poured 1/2 over each of the tubs of fabric and topped them off with just enough boiling water to cover the fabric. I popped the lids on and let them sit until this morning. 

I tossed both into the washing machine for a rinse cycle and then a full wash cycle. I checked both by rinsing under the faucet to  be certain the loose dye was gone.  I’m pretty pleased with how these came out for a minimum of effort.  I’m extra pleased because that store had Orange Rit in the close-out bin this week. Guess I have more dyeing to do.  AND its the weekend so I’m linking this to Off The Wall Friday