I guess I have always considered myself a visual learner, primarily. I know we all learn visually, auditorily AND kinesthetically but lately it has become clear that I learn by DOING. and Doing and doing…
Iterations.
This weekend I dyed. Not just good ol’ dye and water and fabric(+chemicals and stuff), but SNOW and more SNOW and that whole “trickle down” theory we have heard about for years. Well this is what it is really about. The snow (or ice if you are in Miami or Summertime someplace) melts. (Not smelts, as my hands really want to type, which is a fish and I am not sure how good-eating it is, but you can always use it for bait.)
Yes it MELTS and trickles down which creates complex and chaotic and interesting results. To coax the water and dye into some form of order and design, you can arrange the fabric and garments by folding simple or intricate patterns, by scrunching the fabric into folds and mountains and valleys, and by twisting lengths of fabric, scarves and cowls into rope-like pieces that in turn, twist up upon themselves. These and more manipulations create fascinating and symmetrical variations and oft-times repeating patterns.
Here are some examples:
This weekend’s batch was some test swatches, some finished cowls and some pieces of fabric 2-5 yards long.
Some of the swatches are here:
Eyelet swatch still wet
Eyelet swatch dry
Brocade/damask swatch
Brocade/damask draped
Cotton eyelet still wet
Double knit swatch
Swatches and tests
I considered over-dyeing some of the lighter results, but actually like the discernible foreground and background as I perceive it. I know as I continue to design and make* garments and accessories, I will ice/snow dye again and achieve different and more intentional and (somewhat) consistent results.
Ultimately the visual parts of my brain determine what I learn through the process but I must keep doing this again and again to really witness the the effects of the changes… and the knowledge is cumulative…after a certain threshold, something kicks in and sorts all the data on my behalf and interpolates it into usable impulses and ideas. The result is–I learn, I make more and (one hopes) I evolve.
<3
* make = sew or have sewn, in the case of the cowls above, my dear friend Cheryl and I have been collaborating and she has sewn these into being! I am grateful to work with friends on manifesting gorgeous creations!
Below, some of the finished pieces of my weekend foray into ice dyeing. More definitely to come.
I am taking a weaving class Understanding Overshot with Janet Dawson (https://weavingwithjanetdawson.thinkific.com/) and I need more turquoise for the warp as well as the tabby weft (this project takes 2 wefts, one for tabby/background and one thicker for the pattern. Lots. Well, I had lots of 8/2 rayon and 10/2 cotton dyed already, but not really enough of any color. I had 3,000 yards of turquoise in 3 shades so I figured that was plenty if I did a gradient…until I remembered I like to make long warps. The class only requires 5 yards but I wanted to do 10 of course.
8/2 Rayon 1,000 yd hanks
10/2 Cotton 1,000 yd hanks
Already Dyed Yarns
Already Dyed Yarns, Not Enough!
Yarn on Hand
Long story short, I wound and dyed some more turquoise but as I got started I realized I was not certain it was in fact turquoise and not cerulean blue. I did both, as well as some bronze and a shade of brown the name of which I cannot remember. The top of jar had “Great Color” written in Sharpie (??)
I did the yarn in all the blue shades and two pieces of rayon/synthetic blend fabric, one was Devore velvet (acid etched) with rayon velvet on nylon, I believe, potentially to be sewn into infinity scarves later. Additionally I grabbed two big hanks of natural cotton, plied light and dark shades, just for kicks.
8/2 Rayon
Two-tone Cotton
Cream/White Rayon Blend
Cream/White after Dyeing
No loner Cream/White
Saturated with Dye
Dye Process Shots
Just wanted to shoot the fabric draped. These have not been sewn at all yet, but I was eager to see how the dye took to the fabric and how they would work out. I ironed them a bit to dry the fabric, but hey may be a skosh lighter when fully dry.
Commercial Fabric I Dyed for Infinity Scarves
In other news, I finally photographed some shawls here and knit a few fun hats! I cannot stop creating, but getting them photographed and listed is the big challenge!
I got a mess of Rambouillet and lots of Leicester Longwool locks so it was time, and inspiration struck…like a mulit-colored barrel of monkeys.
Here are the results, and I learned some things along the way. For one, I learned I should wash the locks a few more times before dyeing to get a little more lanolin out of them. What I did was to dye them while still in larger clumps with still some lanolin in them, and then I rewashed them with really hot water and Dawn after the fact. I did some in the larger clumps which seem fine but not as de-lanolined as the ones I did tonight where I picked them open and then re-washed them and they are now drying. I will note in the pictures which are which. I will use it all and make fun yarns regardless of how they were done.
These were when I first dyed the Leicester Longwool lock.
These I photographed through the bags, I re-washed the locks in larger clumps and they really show the curls.
These are the locks after I picked them open and separated them, then washed them again, spun them in lingerie bags and picked them open to dry; they are still a little wet in the pics.
Then we have the lovely and yummy Rambouillet top, which is so soft and delicious! (It’s high in fiber and low in calories!) –/-
In process shots, still wet…drying.
All done and dry, so much potential!The hat in the middle is the perfect example of what can become of these braids of fiber!
And in the process, some art happens along the way:
Blotter ArtAccidental ArtAccidental Meme
My favorite thing to do with the hand spun bouclé locks and Rambouillet is to create these fun left-over hats with several yarns together. I will make another post sharing images of these recent hats. Stay tuned.
I started a shawl swatch to see how I liked my recent hand dyed yarns. One was a 3 strand novelty cotton combination and the second one here was 100% cellulose paper yarn. After a bit I realized the shawl was not going to work out so well, so I was playing with folding and arranging the piece into an embellishment, flower or something…It totally made me want to try hyperbolic crochet with the paper yarn. See below!
The result of the hyperbolic crochet edging play is shown here, basket is paper yarn carried with 3 strand novelty cotton yarn. I used a J hook for most of the basket. I switched to g for last couple rounds. Edging is just the paper yarn. Both yarns hand dyed by me.
I started edging with 3dc in each stitch around, about 3/4 of the way around the basket, and finished the round with 2sc in each remaining stitch. Then with a bigger hook (a K hook I believe) I did 2sc in each stitch of the ruffle. The last round was one hdc in each stitch around. IT ruffles quite a bit and I like having the open edge of it although I am not sure of the practical application of the opening, I am sure there is one!
I dyed 10/2 mercerized cotton, some cotton t-shirt yarn which was constructed as a knitted tube, a 3-strand combination of novelty cottons skeined together, and some paper yarn (100% cellulose). Oh and some silk, too!
Here are some pictures of the yarns.
Paper Yarn 200 yds
Novelty Cotton Blend 200 yds
10/2 Mercerized Cotton 1,000 yds
Paper Yarn 200 yds
Paper Yarn 200 yds
Knit tube t-shirt cotton
Sari Silk and Silk Noil Laceweight
Drying dyeing…Sunset colors.
Giant 600 yard hank Novelty Cotton Blend
BALLS!! So I can play, sample & test the waters.
Hats are my comfort food. I’ve said so for years. Here are two recent completions. Both were Noro wool/silk blend yarns. Red blend is entrelac, the blue shades one is a lace rib pattern I devised extemporaneously. The afterthought crochet flower makes me very happy!
I mentioned in a previous post that I wanted to rework a section of the weaving between the repeats…well, I found a way that only required one repair (string) heddle to be created in each section, which still was a pain in the tuchas but I went with it. So I had 6 sections of 9 threads each which first I counted out, to make sure I was shifting the correct threads. Fortunately they were in batches of three, so I counted, recounted, found an error, recounted again…then I could move one…..
Satisfied now I had the right threads, I removed them from the heddles, trying desperately to keep them in order, I re-threaded 8 of them and made a repair heddle out of silk and threaded that one last.Then I re-threaded those into the reed.
Just getting started with green silk
A little further along
The beginning of Corris Piece #2
Once I got started weaving with this lovely green silk, I decided I wanted a darker and deeper and richer shade, like some of the threads I tried in the sampler. I loved how the turquoise came out and also the deep violet and royal blues. I decided to over-dye the silk and some of my rayon cones. I spent a day and a half winding hanks off of many cones and had a dye day in between weaving…I do find its good for me to break things up and do different things each day.
Some Dye Day Pics
Three kinds of silk
5,000 yards each of Cotton and Rayon, I did not get to the cotton
Undyed Yarn
I thought I would get to everything but the cotton will get done another day. So be it. I also had 4 t-shirts I had tied up previously waiting to dye with this batch as well so my day was full.
3 kinds of silk, drying
Rayon
Rayon
Rayon hanging to dry
Here is the overdyed silk getting incorporated into my work:
All the colors
silk 2 & 3 I think
The three silks
Silk 1 & 2 I think
silk 1 & 2
The finished piece will show the transition of color much more clearly
So this is the journey. I am getting faster at walking the treadles, using both feet in order, working the advancing point twill pattern. I still unweave to fix bits, and I still have to count from some starting point to figure out where I am in my pattern…I find a center, either a one or an eight and I count. There is no paper. I have no paper.
Just 1234323454345654 etc….with L and an R between each. I do know that evens go with R and odds go with L and from which side to throw so there’s that. I say all things considered I am making good progress.
Voila! I have taken this piece off the loom. It is officially a sampler, with some errors and a lot of learning and many treadling patterns. Corris is a weaving structure which incorporates multiple colors and repeats of a pattern–offset and it creates a kind of iridescence which I simply adore!
I am going to re thread a few threads between the pattern repeats for subsequent pieces and keep on weaving.
Some things are immediately captivating! Corris weave structure is one of those things. There is a kind of iridescence that forms in the interactions between the colors and it just makes me happy! Technically, Corris a complex weaving design structure devised by Margaret Coe and Amy Norris. There are classes available on line here E-Weave
I took the Corris Effect Part 1 – 8 Shafts class in January and worked with designing patterns for some time and then left it alone to marinate for a bit. When I returned to the software to play with designs again, I started over with re-watching the lessons, and re-designing the basic design line/starting point, and reworking every idea or revising it from the ground up. Suffice it to say this process took a while to get to a point where I felt I could move anywhere close to the loom. I also had to complete what was on the loom. The last piece of a painted parallel warp. I had stalled on completing it for fear of an empty loom and some sadness at completion of about 18 yards of pure joy weaving on this draft with these 10/2 mercerized cotton warps which I wound and dyed. I made several very satisfying scarves therein.
I finished this final scarf:
Final Woven Piece of Painted Parallel Warp, Undulating Twill
Also this whole experience of scarf making left me wanting larger pieces again so everything I was designing now had upwards of 600 threads. Scarves were about 9′, new Corris projects about 20″ !!
So back to the drawing board I go, Fiberworks Silver to be exact. Margaret Coe’s class explains how to utilize the software to get the correct effect but there is still much to be gleaned from trial and error and my own design esthetic and combinations of all of the above. I learn through iterations….
So. I iterate.
and again
and again.
Then I decide it is time to take the plunge and start to commit to a design, and then I see some inspirational images that send me back to redesigning.
This and a discussion with the teacher regarding color shifting and reflections. Not the kind of new age reflections of how this project is a metaphor for my life and how can I move forward with both creating art and creating peace and ease and joy in my life…that will be another post.
Simply reflecting portions of the pattern so that what was once the first of three colors is now second, or in my case second AND third. so I commit to a three repeat design and accept that it will be bigger and take longer to thread and I allow for it to take all the time it takes to make this warp and dress this loom. It will be what it is. It will take the time it takes
Winding warp of 3 colors of 8/2 rayon. 630 threads 25 yards long
This took about three days (6/2-6/4) [Side note: I did take a lot of breaks, snacks, and distractions.] and the whole time I was wondering if my threads would sick together too much to wind onto the back beam once threaded in the heddles. (Spoiler: they DID!)
After winding all this, I took them to the loom and realized I needed to dismantle parts of the loom to add more heddles to a few shafts. Out comes the screwdriver and friends. I removed the top of the loom, redistributed heddles, reassembled. I switched the reed, removed the brake, the reed and beater bar (which holds the reed) and laid them aside. I began the long and arduous task of threading heddles. This took 4 days to complete, 6/6-6/9. [Also, lots of breaks and distractions!]
My chip matches the warp.
Threading Heddles
I have no photos of winding it on the back beam, That was a mess. Some groups of three were problematic, some of them were actually braided together. Winding on the back beam took 2 and half days and that is with not much away-from-loom time. I don’t care. I wanted to get 98% of my 25 yards safely wound on and packed with the contractor paper between and I did it alone and slowly. Front of loom, back of loom, front of loom, back of loom. So it went. It takes the time it takes. I am growing as a person. I love to play with this giant LeClerc!
I threaded the reed. Three threads per dent in 10 dent reed. With three colors in the warp, this was much easier than my last warp! 30 epi for 8/2 rayon according to the teacher, so I went with it! Seems to be working thus far.
Turns out I had one threading error which I fixed after a few inches of weaving. I also have a design area that I am iffy about between the repeats, at the edges of them as it were…may redesign, may not. I have to try several patterns first and see how it reads in each pattern. Plus each pattern I try with and without tabby pics between. Initially I planned to use tabby through out all of this project and made my tie-up to walk the treadles (new for me) so I made treadles 9 and 10 the tabby. Boy does that take some getting used to! For years I had 1 and 10 my tabby treadles and was so on auto-pilot for that. Cellular memory and everything. But I can learn new things! I can adapt, especially to something more efficient.
So off I go, here’s a visual account of my exploration. Click the pic for a larger version
I tried advancing point twill variations, undulating twill, network, mostly with tabby, some without.
Currently wove about 52″. I’ll probably stop at 80″ and make this a shawl for me. More to come!
I have been making art. Yes. But also now sleeping until way later than I intend and staying up later as well. That might account for the sleeping later. I have recently read/heard that we should not awake with a to-do list or base our thoughts on worth, self-worth or value on what we have accomplished, made, completed, etc.
Handspun Yarn
Cotton Batik Mask
Handspun Yarn
Crocheted Shawl
Hand-dyed Sari Silk Yarn
Knit Handspun Shawl
So I awake today and I think, instead of what will I do today, what projects can I complete, start, devise….Instead, today I think “How would I like to feel today?” And I start a list. I like lists.
I would like to feel:
Happy
Enthusiastic
Joyful
Laughter
immersed in my creating process
eager
And then I begin to consider where I feel those things most…for me its with math and art, where math and art come together, color and pattern, fractals, iterations, permutations, quilt blocks, weaving patters and all the possible variations within a given set of parameters, grouping yarns with various colors and textures that I want to use together, grouping fibers and wool for carding…..and I get UP. Later than I imagined I would but so be it.
I got up Feeling Good!
Handspun Yarn
Hand Dyed Roving
And here is the real epiphany. Still somewhat in judgement about the time I finally got out of bed, I texted a friend: “Still making things. And sleeping. A lot.”
And the reply, simply: “Good.”
And I thought, that’s it? Good? Huh! And I paused. And I considered maybe it actually is Good. Maybe I needed to sleep as long as I slept and I was honoring my own internal guidance and getting exactly what I needed to start a new day well rested and feeling good.
This thought alone is better for my health and well being than beating myself up!
Why are we so inclined to berate ourselves and disallow getting exactly what we need when we need it.
What if we are doing it perfectly and simply don’t realize it. AND…we can continue to improve and follow what’s our next highest thought. [My typo “Next hightest thought” is actually pretty good!]
I have more colors of cotton and I plan to make some embellished masks with fancy fabrics and appliques too. Stay tuned for that.
This is green and red Batik cotton fabric, lined with kale cotton fabric, both 100% cotton, and the ties are cotton/Lycra heavy jersey rolled, some call it t-shirt yarn. I find it much more comfortable than the elastic behind the ears variety.
Green and Red Batik Fabric Mask
Green & Red & Kale Mask
More completed masks. Each mask is made with two distinct fabrics so you know which side to wear inside next to your face if you take it off and put it back on. These should all be washed between uses. They are all washable and dryable.