In Water
Use an enamel or stainless steel pot. Heat the water to just below boiling. Do not simmer as that is a type of boiling. Add dyes and an amount of fiber that will free float in the pot. Cook until
the dye exhausts. You can either add vinegar at this stage or add vinegar to the initial soak water you use when you wet the
fiber. A good “glunk” of vinegar does the trick. Follow the directions on the Jacquard Acid Dye instruction sheet for
best results.
If you want consistent perfect color, wash the fiber first and tease the locks apart so
the dye can reach all sides of each hair. Leaving the locks in-tact results in a tie-dye effect which I love to spin. It makes a beautiful yarn.
In Canning Jars
Using your canning pot with the large mouth quart jars
to dye multiple colors or multiple shades of the same color at once.
Fill the jars and the pot with
water. The more fiber you stuff into the jars, the more of a resist you will create. Having the jars with free floating
fiber and teased locks will create a more consistently dyed fiber. Heat the pot until it simmers (the water in the jars will
not simmer) and heat until the dye exhausts.
I like adding small amounts of dye in one jar and slightly
increase the amount of dye in subsequent jars to get different shades of the same color.
You can also
blend colors. Use a small amount of one color to several jars. Add different colors to some, more of the same dye to some
and you will get a nice blend of colors that go well together.
You also can put completely different
colors in each jar. You can dye up to a couple of ounces of dye in each jar this way.
Steam Dyeing
Use a large dyeing pot with a stainless steel steaming basket in the bottom. As this is a steam dyeing process, the basket keeps
the fiber off the bottom of the pot and prevents scorching. Place enough water in the pot to come up to the bottom of the steam
basket.
Place a layer of fiber on top o the steamer basket (regardless of the type of fiber being used.) Then, sprinkle dry dye over the fiber. (Remember, it needs to be wet!) Add another layer of fiber, more dye, and repeat
until the pot is full or you are out of fiber! I can get a full medium sized fleece in a single pot.
You can either use a single color or multiple colors. When using multiple colors, either divide the dyes as in a pie chart or randomly sprinkle dye powder as you go. The color charts below will help you understand how the colors will blend. I prefer to have the dye color show in a large triangle in a pie chart lay-out and use colors that will allow a pleasant blend of colors where they overlap. See some examples of color blending below.
Analogous colors are any three colors which are side by side on a 12 part color wheel, such as yellow-green, yellow, and yellow-orange. Usually one of the three colors predominates. In the illistrations below, the left flower arrangement displays multiple shades of yellow, green and yellow-green. The analogous color illistration on the right has blue, blue violet and violet.
Complementary
colors are any two colors which are directly opposite each other, such as red and yellow and violet. The illustrations
below provide excellent examples of those complementary colors. These opposing colors create maximum contrast and maximum stability.
When steaming, use a spoon or chop-stick to periodically push the fiber around to further blend the colors as desired. Also
add more water periodically to prevent the pot from going dry. I sometimes pour the water through the top of the fiber to help
blend colors. Steam for about 45 minutes.
If you steam roving, work the fiber a bit less. You also can dye yarn this way
either in the skein or the ball. A ball wound on a ball winder is more open at the center, allowing more dye to saturate the
yarn.
Another variation on steam dyeing is to squirt liquid dye (Jacquard Acid Dye mixed in water) over the layers of fiber/yarn/roving. Use the same pie chart technique to divide the colors into 2, 3 or more colors. The liquid dye disburses throughout the fiber
more than the powdered dye and you will get more color blending. I use the squeeze bottles listed under equipment, #5.