It's official! I now have ten new silk scarves, in fresh, pretty springtime colors, listed on my Etsy shop page (jennifoofanne). I hope you hop on over to the shop and check them out!
I really love these new colors - up to this point I'd been getting drab or very subtle colors with my dye process, but with a little tweaking of my "green-dye" method, I have colors that reflect the airy hope and fresh optimism of Spring.
Yay! I hope you love them, too!
Oh, and watch for more springtime silks and bojagi window panels to be listed here and on my Etsy page in the near future!
Green-dyed silk scarves, spring collection 2012
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Voila! Pretty "Silk Scarves Spring Collection" Unveiled!
My silks have been "green-dyed", their curing time is up, and I am ready to unveil the results!
I am really pleased with the colors I've gotten from this dye batch. I used mostly carnations and roses for these silks, changing each scarf's specific amounts of plant material and mordants slightly in their separate dyebaths, with fantastic results!
Just look at the range of colors! They are so pretty, I want to keep them all for myself, but I'm planning to list them on my Etsy shop this weekend (jennifoofanne). They're a limited edition collection; each one is unique and cannot be duplicated. I use a "green-dye" process, using plant materials without any harsh chemical dyes or mordants. The result is a gorgeous silk scarf with a subtle tie-dye look, and because I don't use harsh chemicals in the dye process, these silks are gentle on your skin.
This is going to be a short-term sale, so pick out the scarf you love the most and put it in your shopping cart quick! Before it's gone forever!
I am really pleased with the colors I've gotten from this dye batch. I used mostly carnations and roses for these silks, changing each scarf's specific amounts of plant material and mordants slightly in their separate dyebaths, with fantastic results!
Just look at the range of colors! They are so pretty, I want to keep them all for myself, but I'm planning to list them on my Etsy shop this weekend (jennifoofanne). They're a limited edition collection; each one is unique and cannot be duplicated. I use a "green-dye" process, using plant materials without any harsh chemical dyes or mordants. The result is a gorgeous silk scarf with a subtle tie-dye look, and because I don't use harsh chemicals in the dye process, these silks are gentle on your skin.
This is going to be a short-term sale, so pick out the scarf you love the most and put it in your shopping cart quick! Before it's gone forever!
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Before you compost that...
Once upon a springtime, a few years back, when the soil in my garden was warm and workable, I planted a lovely bed of mesclun lettuces. And as the soil in my garden was very good, the mesclun sprouted and grew and produced many tasty greens. In fact, I had a surplus of delicious greens, and some of these had the misfortune of being picked by myself, only to languish at the bottom of my refrigerator in the produce drawer, where they became very mushy and sad.
The very sad lettuces still had some green to them however, and as I had taken a "Garden Scarves" workshop and had learned exciting things about produce gone bad and all the good that's still in it, I did not mourn their mushiness. I had a plan! Dye silk with plant materials using a "green dye" method! This was the perfect opportunity.
And lo, I was delighted with the results! The lettuces successfully transferred their life essence to the silk fibers, resulting in a lovely, delicate pale green silk scarf. Without harsh chemical mordants. Without harming me or my environment. And colorfast, mind you.
The mushy lettuces, being spent from their labors, were tendered to my compost bin. Some time later the compost was added to my garden. And some time after that, when the soil was warm and workable, I planted a lovely bed of mesclun lettuces.
That's the story of how I got started "green-dyeing" silks. Since then I look at every plant I come across with an eye toward the dye it might give me. It's great fun gathering materials together to dye another batch of silks, and it's always exciting to see the results a month or more later. (This is a slow cloth method!) The results are unique, unpredictable, and fabulous! I plan to showcase my green-dyed silks on this blog. I hope that you, dear reader, will be fascinated, entertained, and amazed, just as I am, with the results.
Welcome!
The very sad lettuces still had some green to them however, and as I had taken a "Garden Scarves" workshop and had learned exciting things about produce gone bad and all the good that's still in it, I did not mourn their mushiness. I had a plan! Dye silk with plant materials using a "green dye" method! This was the perfect opportunity.
And lo, I was delighted with the results! The lettuces successfully transferred their life essence to the silk fibers, resulting in a lovely, delicate pale green silk scarf. Without harsh chemical mordants. Without harming me or my environment. And colorfast, mind you.
The mushy lettuces, being spent from their labors, were tendered to my compost bin. Some time later the compost was added to my garden. And some time after that, when the soil was warm and workable, I planted a lovely bed of mesclun lettuces.
That's the story of how I got started "green-dyeing" silks. Since then I look at every plant I come across with an eye toward the dye it might give me. It's great fun gathering materials together to dye another batch of silks, and it's always exciting to see the results a month or more later. (This is a slow cloth method!) The results are unique, unpredictable, and fabulous! I plan to showcase my green-dyed silks on this blog. I hope that you, dear reader, will be fascinated, entertained, and amazed, just as I am, with the results.
Welcome!
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