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Festival Yarn

  • Rhinebeck 2011

    Brooks Farm Mas Acero – 3 skeins
    Maple Creek Farm Laredo- 3 skeins knit
    Tess Mohair & Merino – 2 skeins knit
    Foxhill Farm Cormo – 1 skein
    Stonehedge Farm Fiber Mill – 1 skein purple knit, 1 skein blue
    Miss Babs BFL Fingering – 3 skeins knit
  • Maryland Sheep & Wool 2011

    Brooks Farm Mas Acero – 3 skeins knit
    Creatively Dyed Calypso – 1 skein
    Sanguine Gryphon Skinny Bugga – 1 skein knit
  • Rhinebeck 2010

    Brooks Farm Mas Acero – 3 skeins knit
    1 Hedgehog Puppet Kit
    1 Sheep Marionette Kit knit
    Maple Creek Farm Omaha – 2 skeins knit
    Creatively Dyed Calypso – 1 skein knit
  • Rhinebeck 2009

    March Hare Sock Yarn – 1 skein knit
    Foxhill Farm Cormo – 2 skeins knit
    Maple Creek Farm Bamboo/Merino/Silk – 1 skein
    Green Mountain Spinnery Wonderfully Wooly – 2 skeins brown, 2 skeins cream
    Creatively Dyed Calypso – 1 skein knit
  • Maryland Sheep & Wool 2009

    Tess Twinkle Toes – 3 skeins
    Maple Creek Farm Alpaca/Bamboo – 2 skeins
    Zauberball Sock – 1 skein knit
    Wullenstudio Sock – 4 skeins 3 skeins abandoned, 1 remains
    Handmaiden Casbah Sock – 1 skein knit
  • Rhinebeck 2008

    Brooks Farm Mas Acero – 2 skeins knit
    Maple Creek Farms DK Superwash Wool – 1 skein teal, 1 skein red
    Trekking XXL – 1 skein knit
    Maple Creek Farm Sock Yarn – 1 skein knit
    Foxhill Farm Cormo Laceweight – 1 skein
    Shelridge Farm Sock Yarn – 2 skeins knit
    Briar Rose Bulky – 1 skein knit and abandoned
    Green Mountain Spinnery Green Mountain Green – 7 skeins knit
  • Rhinebeck 2007

    Brooks Farm Solana – 3 skeins knit
    Aussi Sock Yarn – 1 skein red, 1 skein brown knit
    Briar Rose Fibers Grandma’s Blessing – 2 skeins knit
    Green Mountain Spinnery Green Mountain Green – 9 skeins knit
    Maple Creek Farms DK Merino – 1 skein turquoise, 1 skein orange knit
  • Maryland Sheep & Wool 2007

    Autumn House Farm Sock – 1 skein brown gifted, 1 skein brown/purple
    Tess Yarns Sock – 2 skeins knit
    Brooks Farm Acero – 1 skein purple, 1 skein red knit
    Brooks Farm Solana – 3 skeins

« Dyeing with Beets: A Red, Hot, Love Story, Episode 2 | Main | Hedgehog and Winners »

February 15, 2008

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Comments

Oiyi

The color is very pretty. I enjoyed reading this story. I love happy endings.

kseio

The color is so pretty! How could you be disappointed with that lovely shade?

Marie

What a spectacular end to the love story! I've really enjoyed following along and love the resulting color. Such a warm, subtly complex set of pale golds...it quite inspires me to think about dyeing with natural materials too. :)

Anne

It's lovely! Will the color last through washings down the road?

Dave

Yippee -- it really did come out beautifully. A happy ending, with a surprise twist!

Jessica

The rinsing technique is strangely familiar. ;) Your results look fantastic! And it looks like the yarn bloomed nicely with the dye process. Can't wait to see what you make with it!

Liz K.

How gorgeous! I remember listening to an episode of Cast-on when Brenda talks about how hard it is to get a shade of red in natural dyes. Isn't that why they use bugs?

--Deb

I think it looks great! And, sure that beet red would be marvelous, but red is one of the hardest natural dyes to find, and I think that warm, peachy color just fabulous. And I've enjoyed the story!

carla

Very nice!

Stacey

What a lovely surprise! The yarn turned ot perfect - and you are in love, what else matters?! Nice job and thank you for taking us along on your journey! Now, on to the sweater!!

Jacquie

Awesome!

Denise

I love the color, it looks like a warm buttery yellow to me (but that could be just my screen?) still very nice though. Can't wait to see you knit it in to something:-)

margene

Wow! It is pretty but I didn't expect it to be that color.

Jean

What a beautiful color. Totally fascinating that it's not remotely red. This was a very fun series of posts. Thanks for sharing! And now I think I'm craving beets.

tiennie

Holy heck! Catching up with your posts and see that you have been busy! Cool posts!

Kim

What a cool and unexpected result! Really neat-o. Dying with natural "stuff" is fascinating. You should check out the most recent Yarnival (I forget who hosted, but there's a link in Uberstrickenfrau's last post). Amazing, funny and kinda ooky blog post about dying with black walnuts.

whitney

What a great series of posts! I love the way the yarn turned out, too...not what I was expecting, but really pretty!

Ingrid

Very nice colour -- and a great dyeing saga!

Heather

these posts have been very entertaining!!! you make me want to try my hand at natural dye-work.

Heather

these posts have been very entertaining!!! you make me want to try my hand at natural dye-work.

Sacha

Cute trilogy blog posting. :) Like another poster said, I didn't expect it to be that color. I like the whole 'naturalness' (if that is a word) of it all.

Stella

Ooh, this isn't what I expected at all, but it's lovely. I think that would be a great Rhinebeck tradition to start! Turmeric would probably turn out beautifully, though the potential for mess is high to say the least.

David

Great story. As Kseio said, you can't beet that. In fact it was a tale to dye for!

ann

The end color is great - even though not beety. Thanks for posting your adventures!

Nora

Gorgeous result!!

Mary Beth

I read the whole trilogy in one sitting. It made for entertaining reading & I was shocked at the complete lack of red in the end color. Who'd have thought? Very funny kool-aid episode. It's like regaling a vegetarian with a tale about the juicy steaks you're going to cook up with her hard grown organic veggies.

stacey

interesting -with the way they stain hands, counters and everything else, I'm surprised they don't stick to yarn more! the color is really neat though - subtle.

nova

Oh, I go away for a little while and all sorts of fun happens here. I was thinking that there would be some red yarn at the end; but, wow, I am blown away by the results. I really like this color, even with the twinges of pink!

Brenda

Quite a steamy story! And although I would not have guessed the yarn was dyed with beets, it is very pretty.

Beth S.

I see a lovely soft golden color... very pretty! So I declare the experiment a success. :-) Though I am very curious to see what would happen with the onion skins...

gray la gran

who would'a thought?! ... what pretty results!

Chrissy

The same thing happened to me when I dyed with beets and coffee! I wanted a deep red color that was muted by the brown of the coffee and only came up with a darker version of what you got. Although it is a gorgeous color, it was a little disappointing.

I over-dyed it with Kool-Aid (grape, lemon-lime, and red) and got really muted, earthy colors rather than the day-glo extravaganza that you usually get with Kool-Aid.

Your turned out great, even if it wasn't the color you were going for!

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