WARNING: A long post with lots of photos. Leave now while you’ve got the chance.
I need to start by showing you two wildflowers/weeds near my house. I’m hoping someone can identify at least one of them for me. The first is really sweet and small. You can see a portion of my foot in the photo for scale. The little flower is a nice orange. don’t recall ever seeing this plant before. I’m thinking it’s a garden escapee?
Then there’s the big weed that’s taken over the side yard of an abandoned house near me. When it was small I thought it was milkweed. It’s clearly not. I feel like I should know this one, and that it’s bad, but I can’t place it. I should probably get out my wildflower book. The stalks are quite red, and probably 3′ tall.
So other than looking at weeds/wildflowers, what else have I been doing? Well, at the show last weekend it was clear to me tha I should weave more bookmarks. I decided I wanted to do some monk’s belt, a weave structure I think I’ve only previously done in classes. I thought I’d wound a warp long enough to make 16 bookmarks, but I only got 13 out of it. That’s ok.
Then I really wanted to try doing some ombre dyeing with Rit dyes at home. I had picked up 3 cones of a really nice pima cotto at a local resale store. It’s quite thick, 790 ypp, very soft, and I figured it would weave up quickly and take dye well, plus I wasn’ out much money if it didn’t work. So I wound a warp for two scarves, and wove the first one with an undulating twill.
After that, remembering my recent undulating twill disaster (different draft), I re-threaded for huck lace, but forgot to take a photo on the loom. I got both scarves woven, then spent a bunch of time online looking at websites and blogs about ombre dyeing. I have to say, there was quite a bit of inconsistency in process and time needed, so I figured I’d have to go with my gut. I got the scarves washed and rinsed, then brought the needed tools outside.
the middle section about 30 times. I wanted the bottom quite dark, and dipped it about 120 times. Then I hung it on my arbor (another story for another time). I went in the house to get the second scarf and the next bottle of dye. While I was gone the wind kicked up and blew the scarf against my neighbor’s fence.
You’d think I would have learned from the experience with my neighbor’s garage, and taken more care when I dumped out the blue dye in the weeds behind my own garage, but no.
There was so much of it that it didn’t really wipe off. I decided since it’s behind the garage I didn’t really care. So I headed to th other side of the yard and started the clean up. Fewer tools needed.
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