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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Walnut Husk Wool Dye


The beautiful rusty orange colour above is the result of my walnut husk dye project.

My great grandmother ran an orchard in Trout Creek that my family visited when I was younger. Among the cherries, apples, plums, and pears there were also walnut and hazelnut trees. I remember going out to visit in the fall when the walnuts were ready and seeing my great grandmother's hands were stained brown from removing the green hulls that encased the walnuts.
My Grandma has now taken over the orchard and the family still delights in the fruit and one of a kind "spencer" apples my great grandfather created when he worked at the Summerland research station.
This year when the walnuts began to fall from the tree, I asked if I could have the hulls. The hulls are not useful in any way to my grandma, in fact they're a bit of a nuisance because they are not allowed in the compost. Walnut husks have a chemical in them that kills off some plants, they're also not good to keep on the ground because they kill the grass too.
So she happily bagged up a whole bunch of the hulls and gave them to me to use as a dye. I figured if they dye your skin then they must dye wool quite well and it did!

I took one bag of the walnut hulls (I didn't weigh them) I put them in a nylon sock and soaked them in water for 3 days.
I washed my raw wool in three baths of detergent (greasy wool is not meant to dye well) I then boiled the water with the husks and 1 tbsp of alum for about half an hour. After I took it off the heat I took out the husks, strained the water and put the wool into the dye solution. I left the wool in overnight.
After taking the wool out I soaked it in a vinegar/water solution, rinsed and air dried.


Here's a picture of the hulls in the bag after I took them out of the freezer (freezing them keeps them from getting moldy)

Thursday, October 13, 2011

whoa Nessie!


My new favorite book from the library is "Amigurumi Knits, patterns for 20 cute mini knits" by Hansi Singh. What sold it for me was the Nessie pattern. When asking my kids which cute and cuddly amigurumi they wanted the answer was, "the eggplant" and "the peas"... haven't made those yet due to lack of suitable yarn laying around the house... I can't exactly make Nessie colour peas in a pod or they might look like they've gone bad and a blue or red eggplant would just be wrong! I am planning on making the peas and the eggplant though so check back. Anyway I made Nessie here and thought it was going to be one of the hardest things for me to do but with the pictures and clear instructions in the book, I had absolutely no problem. I'd recommend the book to anybody. And see the background of tartan, it's the Heritage of Scotland tartan and is also my new kilt what you see is the pleats (back).

Also, I've been getting ready for Halloween! The countdown has begun and I'm already making my final stitches on everyone's costumes. This year it's going to be so good I bet one of them might even make the Christmas card photo.... I know you probably don't know what I mean but trust me it's going to be good!

Friday, September 9, 2011

A long awaited post on "plarn"


Now that I have my spinning wheel, I've been spinning and imagining spinning all sorts of different materials.
One of the things I've spun is "plarn" (plastic yarn) recycled from shopping bags. I cut the bags into long, thick stips. Then tied them together and spun. I filled up a couple of bobbins and proceeded to make a two ply plarn using half grey wal-mart bags and half white (mixed with blue and green) grocery bags.
I will then make a re-usable shopping bag.
go green :)

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Kilt Business



A year later after our initial idea to start a kilt making business, finally we have started. Our business license has arrived and so far we have made two kilts under our business name with the promise of more kilts to come in the future. As the parade season dwindles to an end, pipe bands (as well as our own) take a break and start back up in the fall. Paul has been practicing his bagpipes with renewed enthusiasm by putting a positive outlook on the outcome of his efforts.



But back to kilts. We are ready to go with buckles, straps, canvas interfacing, cotton lining, threads and spare sewing needles lined up and ready for action. If you want to see some more pictures about our kilt making, I have designated a separate blog that will focus only on the business. Check it out at http://mcphailkilts.blogspot.com
All of our kilts are traditionally hand sewn. We go through two needles (both of different sizes) per kilt because after the amount of sewing it takes to make a kilt the needles get dull quickly and as Paul found out in Keith and the kilt making school, you should only use sharp needles.

Paul also designed and built a table specifically for kilt making with a long and wide table top and a shelf below for storage. (shown above)

As for the future of Rapid Panda Express... I will continue blog writing about personal adventures, wool spinning, knitting/crocheting, and anything else that arises that is interesting.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Making yarn while the sun shines!

Let me paint a romantic picture for you of me basking in the beautiful Okanagan sun, sitting in front of my spinning wheel wearing my floor length sun dress. A light breeze rustling the leaves of the trees, my bare feet treadling and my hands spinning soft white wool.... I don't think I can find anything more therapeutic than that!

Now, let me update my findings on my Turmeric Dye. I am 100% positive that there is no way to make Turmeric colourfast. One day left in the sun and the brilliant canary yellow turned to a dusty off-white that looks like it's yellowed from age. I was so disappointed, but alas! I have a solution. I will dye those items with onion skins which I am told by many sources is an excellent yellow dye.



Above is one of my recent projects. The wool is from a small farm in Alberta that I happened to come acquainted with while I was living out there. It's called Ravenwood Farm and they're well known for their meat and own a meat shop in the village of Caroline. All their meat is 100% ethically raised and 100% tasty!

As for the yarn itself. I spun it to be a kind of lumpy bumpy art yarn which is plied with a thin single ply and a chunky/lumpy single ply... not getting into anything technical here or anything. Anyway I made a lovely toque out of it that I may wear in the winter or give away as a gift... who knows.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Turmeric Dye


Above is the undyed wool yarn.

Turmeric is a widely used ingredient in curry as well as mustard. Have you ever had a mustard stain on your clothes? Or has curry ever stained your plastic ladles yellow? That's turmeric for you. Turmeric has been widely used as a natural dye and is the traditional dye for buddhist monk robes. Some also use turmeric for medicinal purposes, turning it into a paste and smearing their bodies with it.
So yesterday I used turmeric as a dye by filling up a pot of water and adding approximately 3 - 4 tablespoons full of ground turmeric into it. For dyes, the root itself is meant to be used because the ground turmeric doesn't dissolve. But the ground stuff is all I had so I used it.

I boiled then simmered the water/turmeric for about half an hour. It became a bright red colour. I tested the dye by dipping a strand of wool in. It instantly dyed yellow, so I stuck a whole skein of wool in. The dye was uneven because I didn't saturate the wool in water first but I like the slightly uneven look that it got.
After I took it out of the pot, I soaked it in vinegar as a mordant for the dye but I've read that turmeric fades with time (we'll see about that).


Monday, April 25, 2011

A Crafty Easter


Happy Easter blog readers!
This year was the first year I used the plastic shrink wrap egg covers and I couldn't believe how well they worked. It took a matter of seconds to decorate my hard boiled eggs by slipping the covers over the eggs and lowering them one by one into boiling water with a spoon. It was instantaneous. I thought I was going to have trouble but it was so simple, I barely had to do anything. They look so pretty.
Anyway, Easter morning consisted of an e'gg'citing egg hunt around the house, eating a breakfast of these adorable little hard boiled eggs with hot cross buns and driving our nearly hour drive to church for Easter celebrations. For lunch we had bacon sandwiches (a tradition worth repeating!) they were so good, I had mine with mustard and alfalfa sprouts.... yum!
We all just kind of chilled out around the house, eating chocolates, running around, reading, etc. Then I made a couple salads to bring over to my cousin's place for easter dinner. I made a raw vegan bean sprout salad and a broccoli cole slaw. All the food was delicious, we had a wide assortment of salads as well as the traditional ham, smoked turkey, stuffing and mashed potatoes.
After dinner we bottle fed some baby goats, I was given the honor of naming one of the goats. Two were already named Oreo and Cookie, so I veered off the food names and named the little goat "Winston" and it looked like a Winston too.
Then we searched all over the farm in a large scale outdoor egg hunt. The kids were climbing stacks of hay, onto tractors, into the wood pile, up trees and into the barns finding bags of eggs everywhere.
Then we settled down and I demonstrated how my carders and spinning wheel works. I found out that I must be more of a natural at fiber art than I thought I was.
All in all, the day was loads of fun. We brought the kids home and tucked them into bed. Paul and I watched The Passion Of the Christ. A very fitting movie for the easter season, obviously we wouldn't want the kids to watch it because it's far too brutal. It makes me cry nearly the whole way through, an awesome movie though. Paul amazingly fell asleep during the part when Jesus was carrying his cross. I don't know how anyone could fall asleep during that movie, but there you have it. It's not like Paul didn't like it or thought it was boring, he was just tired and falls asleep to every movie we watch together. I can never keep him awake.

Anyway, in the days before easter we did many different crafts with the school, with the library story group and at home. A memorable craft was a construction paper basket weaving project. The kids got coloured hard boiled eggs to put in it instead of chocolates, YES!!!! ten points to the one who thought that one up.


Also, a little project I did myself from the book, "Big Ass Book of Crafts" by Mark Montano. I highly recommend this book for enthusiastic crafters who want a new spin on paper mache or popsicle stick crafts. Behold, the popsicle stick cross! Good project for any time of year. In the book he calls for a wooden medallion for the centre but I couldn't find one. So I used a jewelry piece instead.