At the Bendigo show I was eating from a bag of mini-doughnuts and walking past someone selling mattresses. I exclaimed loudly " I might dye it myself. I'm good at dyeing." The mattress guy said "dieing? That's quite a skill". I gave him a doughnut and went on my way.
The very next stall I went in to was Bellevue Park Wool. Single source Australian wool? Ten ply hanks for Chuck? Yes please.
The only thing is I didn't love the hand-dye job, and the undyed hanks were 10 dollars cheaper. So I bought the undyded, and scuttled over to the Handweavers stall, where they sell the dyes I use.
I dyed up all four hanks yesterday. I don't think I've ever dyed a jumper's worth in my little dye pot. I normally wrap my skeins or put them in a zip lock, because I'm pretty sure my op-shop bought dye pot in aluminium. I started this wrapped in glad-wrap, but it escaped.
I'm really happy with how they came out. the one below is the most variegated, and in some lights they look pink, some orange and some red. The yarn is still all soft and puffy, and I'm rally looking forward to knitting with it.
The very next stall I went in to was Bellevue Park Wool. Single source Australian wool? Ten ply hanks for Chuck? Yes please.
The only thing is I didn't love the hand-dye job, and the undyed hanks were 10 dollars cheaper. So I bought the undyded, and scuttled over to the Handweavers stall, where they sell the dyes I use.
I dyed up all four hanks yesterday. I don't think I've ever dyed a jumper's worth in my little dye pot. I normally wrap my skeins or put them in a zip lock, because I'm pretty sure my op-shop bought dye pot in aluminium. I started this wrapped in glad-wrap, but it escaped.
I'm really happy with how they came out. the one below is the most variegated, and in some lights they look pink, some orange and some red. The yarn is still all soft and puffy, and I'm rally looking forward to knitting with it.
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