Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Eco-dyeing

In October, my guild had a workshop on dyeing fabric with natural items.


The fabric had been pre-treated with a mordant and we dipped each piece of fabric into iron water to lightly dampen before placing our leaves and flowers on the fabric.  The instructor - Erin Miller - brought all kinds of samples.

I didn't roll mine until I got home (I was too busy helping with the meeting) which I was able to add rose petals and geranium leaves to the mix.

The BEFORE shot
After putting the rolled up fabric into my vegetable steamer for 90 minutes, I kept it in a plastic bag for about 24 hours.

Probably what surprised me the most was the purple spots from the roses.  And the fact that those golden rod stems and flower added a lot of yellow.


Isn't this interesting?



I rinsed out the fabric, pressed it and hung it up on my design board for some inspiration.  I want to do something special!

It was so much fun to try something new, especially since it did not involve any harsh chemicals!

Have a wonderful day! Patty

14 comments:

  1. What a very fascinating process. I look forward to seeing what you create with this fabric!

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  2. Very cool! I love hoe the purples and yellows play together on the fabric.

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  3. That is so cool! No pink, just purple and yellow. Mother Nature did good!

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  4. Eco dyeing really is alot of fun. Thanks for sharing what happened with your experiment. There is lots of lovey patterning.

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  5. Very pretty fabric you made!!! Are you in the same guild with the Off-Kilter Quilter?? Deja-vu! I just heard her talking about eco dyeing on her podcast this morning.

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  6. Super cool! After you admire and pet it for awhile, I am excited to see what you do with it!

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  7. Very fun! Looking forward to seeing where your inspiration takes you with this piece.

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  8. How pretty! Since I am not eager to try commercial dyes, this appeals to me.

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  9. Fascinating. What is iron water?

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  10. Beautiful work. I would use it as a whole piece to preserve the wonderful design accomplished.

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  11. This is so neat! I love the colors and patterns in this! I took a natural dying workshop while I was in college (and that was fun to explain to friends, they thought I meant something else) but we did dye baths from single sources, like goldenrod, red cabbage, and dandelions. It was fun but there weren't the color variations like you got here.

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