Пікірлер
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest 5 ай бұрын
Wonderful video great example
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest 5 ай бұрын
4:22 a natural fixing agent is a rhubarb leaf. We use it North America.
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest
@JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest 5 ай бұрын
7:00 ah I should have waited, she does mention rhubarb
@resourcedragon
@resourcedragon 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this fascinating and informative video. The colours you obtained are beautiful.
@spiritualfusion2040
@spiritualfusion2040 Жыл бұрын
Hi Emma, brilliant video TFS. I live not far from you and it is lovely to see local people on KZbin. My question as a newbie to natural wool dyeing/spinner is what percentage of dried material to wool should be used? Thanks again for sharing XX
@MoniqueArmitage
@MoniqueArmitage Жыл бұрын
Looks like fun
@nancysaake6497
@nancysaake6497 Жыл бұрын
I could live in your wool shed! Thank you for the video.
@AnimeShinigami13
@AnimeShinigami13 Жыл бұрын
I recently discovered a kettle that may be copper and may be bronze turns purple cabbage dye LUMINOUS purple. But turns into a misty pale green when exposed to baking soda. I had enough excess to measure some out for experimentation. Yellow is far too easy to get I'm afraid. I don't need to buy fustic or weld.
@clothatelier3562
@clothatelier3562 Жыл бұрын
Please note that purple cabbage is not a dye, the colour will not remain. Please colour test properly, for light and wash fastness. Also you can get many yellows but again most of them are fugitive. Worth researching first, so many good books out there that can help…
@AnimeShinigami13
@AnimeShinigami13 Жыл бұрын
@@clothatelier3562 i know, one of them is overdue at the library and a good half of the recipes in it call for chrome. A lot of my cabbage dyed yarn doesn't seem to be fading by much in the jars. But I also use a lot of alum and a lot of baking soda. The latter of which turns it blue. i'd rather use dyes I don't have to order from tropical countries that could be exploited by american companies and not know. besides being on disability and having a limited budget, I can only learn a skill like this by truly testing the dyes out, which means making that purple cabbage dye and learning what makes it fade and what doesn't. btw, I tried rhododendron and iron supplements and hooo boy, i got a really really strong moss or khaki green. I'd rather it be brighter, but this was some pretty potent dye. I could probably tiedye with this no problem.
@chelseyummali
@chelseyummali 2 жыл бұрын
Is the hot pink cochineal ?
@abdulkadirthecarguy1948
@abdulkadirthecarguy1948 2 жыл бұрын
Turks used madder in such a way British agents try to steal its formula for a long time.. 😅 When we paint with madder it become reddest red you can ever see... It used to take them 40 days and 38 diffrent progcess...
@chupachupslolli
@chupachupslolli Жыл бұрын
Bu konuyla ilgili kitap/kaynak paylaşabilirseniz çok sevinirim 😁
@KittenBowl1
@KittenBowl1 Жыл бұрын
You know Turkey is not where madder comes from? And there are different kinds of madder. Indian, European and Japanese madders. And Asia has been dying silk, cotton and linen with madders longer than Turkey has existed on the map. These days what comes out of Turkey is mostly synthetic acrylic and not 100% wool. Commercial yarn companies make 80% acrylic and 20% wool cakes and they’re made in Turkey as it’s way cheaper to produce in a developing country like Turkey. Btw Turkey isn’t known for producing great wool. Island and Iceland do however. NZ land wool are softer however. And in South America for wool and alpaca. Not Turkey.
@elemegigoznuru18
@elemegigoznuru18 Жыл бұрын
Öyle ama kardeş şu an o ilmi bilen var mı hani
@chelseyummali
@chelseyummali 2 жыл бұрын
Indigo- blue Weld- yellow Fustic- yellow Madder- oranges Mustard- yellow Logwood- purples Grey Cochineal- pinks reds Thanks so much!!
@HappyGnoux
@HappyGnoux 2 жыл бұрын
wow alibaba cave! So many beautiful things! I loooooove the yarns and and also find the indian printed fabric really pretty!
@HappyGnoux
@HappyGnoux 2 жыл бұрын
Really really great video! thank you! I would love to know what % of cream of tartar you use for the mordant (you said a "dash" but I'm not sure how much it is per Grams of dried wool). thank you once again for this great video!
@lizintas8396
@lizintas8396 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent and informative
@anitacharlton5662
@anitacharlton5662 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@ADHUK
@ADHUK 4 жыл бұрын
Brilliantly filmed, and you did a good job too, very natural.
@neelamann9334
@neelamann9334 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Em. I see you work the yarn from the centre of the cake. I always save the label, write on it where I bought it from and wrap some of the yarn round it. Then I fold it over and tuck it into the middle of the cake so that I know what it is (and how many metres) so that I know what it is when I come back to it months later and can't remember what it is! However, your yarn is so beautiful to knit with that I can't wait to get my fingers working with it.
@swapnakhude2911
@swapnakhude2911 7 жыл бұрын
Which music album is this?