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Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Eco dyeing experiment :)

THIS time I was playing with the remnants of my beautiful Mothers Day bouquet :)  It had lots of gorgeous lilies and roses.. The roses faded first, and unfortunately I had thrown most of them away before thinking of dyeing with them (duh).  I only thought of it after wiping pollen from the lilies off my window sill ... it reminded me of India Flints book Second Skin (LOVELY book!) she has a piece of silk dyed with lily stamens in there.  

So, I left my last rose hidden away at the back of the vase until the lilies were done.. and then I chopped 'em all up :)

I decided to do 2 strips of white habotai/china silk.  One of them just wrapped around a stone, the other around a rusted 'cog' found on a Dorset beach a couple of years ago.

On the strip wound round a stone I laid lily petals as well as stamens

Bundling it around a stone

Tied up nice and tight

Ready for the pot
 I 'cooked' them for about an hour in vinegar and water, then left them in the pot over night.

This is how it looked when I took the lid off..
this is when it gets exciting - unbundling and seeing if it worked

Lovely windy day.. took only 10 minutes to dry :)

This is my favourite piece.. I LOVE the dark iron marks.  You can't see it on the photo but
there are some nice - though faint - rose leaf prints.  I didn't have many stamens on this piece.

The petals left no marks, and I didn't get much from the stamens on this one (and there were quite a  lot on).
The iron in the water left its mark on the parts which weren't touching the bottom of the pan

I was surprised at how little yellow I got on the silk..  look at what it did to my table as I unbundled them!!

Took a good 20 minuted scrubbing and bleaching to get these buggers to fade!
Lesson for next time: Unwrap on an old towel!

I've got a long way to go yet with this eco dyeing.. but it's definitely progress.  And the hunt is now on for more rusty bits n pieces..  and the ever elusive eucalyptus tree :)  

7 comments:

  1. I always love seeing the eco-dyeing experiments of others; it has become an addiction for me and this is the year I intend to get more consistent (perhaps) with lots of new experiments; Thanks for posting about the lily stamens..too bad you weren't intentionally going for that yellow on the tablecloth-quite bright and lively! The intentional iron marks and prints look very fine, indeed!And thanks for coming by my blog, Deborah.

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  2. interesting experiment. Ive done a wee bit of rust dyeing but hadn't thought of flowers, Ali

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  3. Ginny :) that was my wipe-clean plastic table top.. which did NOT want to wipe clean. It's gone now though thank goodness.

    Ali, take a look at India Flints dyeing - she creates amazing eco prints with leaves and flowers. She has a couple of books out, Second Skin is the one I have and it is lovely. Not got 'recipies' and how-tos' but very inspirational and gives enough information to start you experimenting on your own eco adventure.

    xx

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  4. Great that you're going to try eco print. Nice to have some marks on the first trial. You'll explore the beauty with euc leaves once you got it.

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  5. Thanks Terrie, you keep on inspiring me to try again! This isn't my first go, but the strongest marks I have got yet :) The iron made a big difference
    xx

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  6. I'm fascinated by the process of dying with natural things, love the rusty shades you achieved. I remember we tried to dye eggs with the yellow gorse flowers once, often use to experiment as children.

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  7. Hi Ruthie :)
    I'd LOVE to be making lovely eco prints.. I'm not there yet, but hope to be one day :) I do like the rust marks, and there are faint leaf outlines within the rust that the camera misses.
    Take a peak at Terrie's blog her eco prints are gorgeous, and I just know you will love her journals..
    http://terriekwong.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/eco-print-wordless-story-book.html
    and India Flint's work is AMAZING! This is her website; http://www.indiaflint.com

    xx

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