Showing posts with label dye humor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dye humor. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2009

So Ugly, I Couldn't Give Them Away....

The secret container in the bowels of my basement contains the above plus the following:

Class Dyeing Projects Gone Awry...

What Was I Thinking...

It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time....

So That is What Those Dyes Look Like Together (I was Better Off Not Knowing)....

They Said They Were PFD...

Experiments in Purple (or Trying to Find the Perfect Purple).....

Maybe Overdyeing Will Fix This (NOT)....

Maybe Discharging Will Fix This (also NOT)...

Now you know the truth!! I make horrible mistakes in dyeing and have a big Rubbermaid container in my basement keeping them from the world. Occasionally, I bring them out and offer them up for free during classes and discharging sessions. Yes, these are so bad that I can't even give them away!!

But I now know they are the most incredible backdrops for doing marbling!! Marbling on colors is very, very forgiving -- you don't see all the little mistakes that you see on the stark white background. I do use both transparent and semi-transparent paints when marbling over color. If the marbling color is light, I will add a little titanium white which is pretty opaque and which pops the color a little. I also tend to work on analogous colors so I will marble over a purple with all shades of blues and a little purple, red with yellows, oranges and reds etc. When working with transparents, this prevents the uglies (those unpredictable mud colors that happen when mixing complementary colors). I don't like using fully opaque paints with marbling as they tend to slough off more when you are rinsing and leave a bit of a mess.

Today, I alum-ed up perhaps 20 yards of my supreme uglies hoping to transform many of them into nice pieces of fabric!! It seems clear, however, that there could be another category -- Maybe Marbling Will Fix This....

This was a piece of rust colored shiboried fabric -- the color was ugly and the pattern was nothing to write home about. I like its new incarnation.
This was a piece of Joann's "finest" cotton dyed a pale orange and very boring.


This was also from my very early days of dyeing when I used Joanns white Country Classics fabric which was terribly flawed, but it was white! This had been dyed a pale yucky purple.


Same as above. I really like this new incarnation!



Again, same as above, a palish lavender/purple -- very nondescript and the kind of purple you get when the reds and blues don't quite mix. It is much happier this way!





Monday, July 21, 2008

50 Ways to Tell That Dyeing has Taken Over Your Life

Often at night when trying to go to sleep, I think up top ten lists (instead of counting sheep). That is how I started this list. I have seen it repeated now on a couple of blogs but this is the original which I will update as I get more!


1. You look forward to days when the temp is in the 90's and the humidity is at least 80%.


2. You have to plan your showers ahead as you frequently run the hot water tank out of hot water!

3. You only buy clothing that is white. In fact you buy one of everything, take it home, see how well it dyes. If it passes, you go to every store in the area buying up your size and one size smaller and larger.

4. People avert their eyes when they see you in public with large bruises (really just that purple dye that got away from you).

5. All your pillowcases are tie - dyed.

6. You always spell out "d - y - e" or "d- y - e - i - n - g" when speaking in public.

7. You can recite from memory all the Procion MX pure dye colors and their numbers. You even know what the numbers and letters mean.

8. You know what every MX color discharges to.

9. You analyze every piece of commercial batik trying to figure out "how did they do that?" and then try to duplicate it.

10. You own salt in 20 different sizes.

11. You own a rainbow colored microwave which lives in your basement.

12. You know the weight in grams of every pfd fabric on the market and you own some of each.

13. You never have met a color you didn't like (and want to duplicate).

14. Your husband has to schedule when he will do his whites as there may be no hot water in the tank.

15. You contemplate dyeing that white streak in your hair green or purple or better yet multi-color.

16. You regularly check out thrift stores and ebay for old white linens and silks.

17. You wonder why everyone doesn't know the difference between dyes and paints.

18. You own pvc pipe in every diameter that is made.


19. You stalk construction sites to see if you can get 6 inch pvc pipe for your shibori.

20. You covet your neighbor's six gallon buckets as they would be perfect for your next dyeing session.

21. You try to buy all products in large plastic containers. Your husband just thinks you are being frugal.

22. You don't make homemade frosting anymore as the container that the store-bought stuff comes in is perfect for your dye solutions.

23. You can't imagine buying your dyes in anything less than 1 lb containers.

24. You seek out pool stores in winter in the cold Northeast and then buy the largest containers of pH+ they have. (They never fail to offer you a small container first for your "hot tub".) Corollary: you go around to all seasonal displays in supermarkets, Walmarts and home stores to find half priced pH+ in September. You check the label to make sure it is indeed sodium carbonate and not bicarbonate.

25. You buy a heated mattress pad to use in your dye studio.


27. You do your chores in the hour it takes for your low water immersion fabrics to batch.

28. You have to caution family members not to get too close to the edge of all your laundry sinks as they might stain their clothes.

29. If there was ever a fire in your house, you would take out your 3 1/2 inch thick dye book first as one of your treasured possessions.

30. You own every dye book ever written but never look at any of them (except for your treasured dye book).

31. You frequent home stores on a regular basis with your husband as there may always be a new brush or sponge or leftover pieces of plexiglas.

32. Your children and husband roll their eyes when they see what socks and tshirts you are wearing in public.

33. You now own a lot of black clothing as it does not show any dye stains!

34. You buy fabric 100 yards at a time. You never let the supply in your basement get below 100 yards.

35. You no longer have to look up any formulas for soda ash or urea water!

36. You have given the MSDS sheets of every color of MX dyes plus the auxiliaries to your engineer husband so he no longer believes your are trying to poison your family.

37. You treasure your dye dogs as they are just the beginning of a more interesting piece!

38. You get most of your daily exercise by running up and down the steps to check on the progress of things in the dye pots.

39. You always find something you can use in your dyeing in the dollar stores.

40. You still take classes on dyeing on the outside chance that you will learn a new or better way to do something.

41. You finally have a use for all that old pantyhose from your work days in the corporate world. (It works wonderfully for straining dyes or for scrunching fabric.)

42. Your friends and family nod politely when you start talking about your dyeing experiments.

43. You have absolutely NO problem cutting into hand dyed fabric!

44. You have been known to sit in bed and fold and refold newly dyed fabric.

45. You save all your priority mail envelopes as the Tyvek doesn't take dye and washes wonderfully so you can label all your experiments without losing the information on a heavily dyed piece.

46. You get Tyvek from all your friends as well!

47. Your local fabric store has your number on speed dial and gives it out to anyone who wants something dyed. (It should be noted that you don't do commission dyeing.)

48. You can recognize fabric you have dyed in any of the local quilt shows (or see people walking around in something you have dyed).

49. You are invited to new groups (so people can be the first to pick out fabrics they want).

50. You read Dyerslist and Complex Cloth each day without fail in case there is something new you can experiment with.