posts tagged ‘overdye’

The Perfect Red

Monday, April 24th, 2006

Last April, we were visiting Japan and I felt the need to buy Noro in the “mother country”. The selection of Noro Cash Iroha at Okadaya near Shinjuku station was surprisingly limited — a lot of black and a bit of red. So, I bought the red.

This red was a warmish, rusty red that just wouldn’t wear well on me, so after I finished the sweater, I overdyed the whole thing. I wanted to shift the colour from warm to cool without darkening or muddying the existing colour. Solution? Overdye with just over 1% WashFast Magenta.

2006-04-24_hourglass_dye.jpg
Colour shift: finished, overdyed sweater is a slightly cooler red than the original Noro Cash Iroha yarn

Since the yarn has a bit of silk content, I had to soak the sweater at least overnight… I was busy most evenings, so I ended up soaking it for three nights. Then the dyeing happened on Thursday evening with 4 g of dye powder (the sweater weighed 360 g, so this is just over 1% DOS), 36 g of citric acid (to make the dye strike) and 36 g of glaubers salt (to promote even dyeing). I agitated pretty much continuously for the first few minutes and then I’d come back and agitate the sweater lightly during each commercial break of The O.C. The sweater cooked for about an hour in total and I let the whole thing cool down overnight.

2006-04-24_hourglass.jpg
Finished Hourglass Sweater, slouchier than expected

Hourglass Sweater

  • Pattern: From Joelle Hoverson’s “Last Minute Knitted Gifts”
  • Size: I knit the smallest size (33″) but the sweater stretched on its own to about 36″
  • Yarn: Noro Cash Iroha, 9 skeins (the ball in the photo is what I have left of the 9th skein)
  • Needles: US 7 / 4.5 mm Addi Turbos
  • Mods: I shortened the sleeves by about an inch (they were 17.5″ before joining to the body). Oh, and lazy me didn’t kitchener the sleeves and body under the arm. I did — of course — a three-needle bind off.
  • Notes: Well, I think everyone who has made this sweater with Cash Iroha has made the same comments before — if in doubt, make a smaller size since the yarn will stretch out. Also, the neckline is very “Flashdance”. I had to string some additional yarn through the neckline in a lame attempt to maintain the neck shaping.

A couple months ago in Seattle, I came upon Cash Iroha in the exact same dyelot as I bought in Japan, so I purchased 2 additional skeins (for a total of 11 skeins) but ended up not needing them at all. I’ll probably use the remainder of the yarn for a little scarf or maybe a hat… and then overdye that too.

This sweater is super easy to make and so so so comfortable to wear. I think I might even make another one… with more mods of course.

Colour Me

Monday, September 12th, 2005

Remember this nice GGH Savanna yarn? To make this lovely cabled sweater? We drove all the way out to Steveston to buy it. And it’s not my colour. It’s kind of a beigy-oatmeal colour — natural looking. But it makes me look ill, so I overdyed my swatch to see if I could get something better:

2005-09-12DSC_0064.jpg
My kinda colour?

Yeah, I like. It’s just straight magenta acid dyes and it’s come out a wine-coloured red. Nice. But hopefully in the future, I won’t need to make bad colour choices anymore! A friend and I are taking a “colour” class in October where someone will tell you what colours you are suited for. I need somebody to tell me, “hey, that colour looks bad on you…” because sometimes you just get emotionally attached to a colour… or is it just me? and my strange obsession with lilac purple?

Sweet Shop!

And thanks for everybody’s comments, email and overall wonderful support and confidence in me! This is all very exciting and scary at the same time. More dye stuff is coming to me, so the shop won’t be empty for long!

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Posted in Dyeing | 12 Comments »

about sweetgeorgia

Driven by an obsessive, passionate and often tumultuous relationship with colour, Felicia Lo is the owner of SweetGeorgia Yarns, a handpainted yarn and design company based in Vancouver. Founded in 2005, SweetGeorgia Yarns is about intense, relentless and unapologetic colour in luxurious natural fibres and textiles. She writes about all things knitting, spinning, dyeing, and weaving here at sweetgeorgia.

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