18 May 2025

ursulas_alcove: 19th century engraving of a woman using a drop spindle (Default)
I have a show coming up. I recently bought out a yarn shop in Canada, no, not the whole shop. I bought the same hemp yarn that I've always carried. I guess she was tired of trying to have it catch on. She doesn't dye. I do. I have a client who facilitated the trade, many thanks to Al-Jania. With the show coming up next weekend, I have to get moving.

Hemp Yarn to Dye

Yesterday I got blue and purple dyed. I skeined more yarn and put on labels. The labels were a trip all on their own. Nothing is easy nor is it cheap. The cost of dye has gone up too. I am still working out just how much things like tape for the labels, the labels themselves, the dye and the incredible quantity of water that dyeing takes. I may only use 2.5 gallons for the bath but rinsing, then synthrapol, then soap and then another rinse, not to mention the original scouring and rinsing. I can go through 125 gallons per color. That is why I try to dye all my linen thicknesses and hemp at the same time. Only now, linen has a 10 % tariff. I didn't buy any yet. The chemicals add about $.45 to each ball. The label adds another $.50. Not sure on the water and the tape. Tape has gotten expensive. I see why some people use staples. I think staples catch on the yarn. I don't care for them. Anyway, labels were obtained at OfficeMaximus. They got the correct thickness of paper this time.

Dry on the Yankee Clothesline

But nothing is easy. Forget the power outage yesterday. I bought the wrong kind of salt last time. I picked up trace minerals instead of fine salt. It sat in the car all winter, adding ballast on icy roads. As I ran out of my stash of dye salt, I hauled the 25 pounder out of the car and up the hill, cut it open, only to find out, it isn't really salt (NaOH). I looked up when tractor supply opens. They open ay 9 am on Sunday. Shower, get dressed, throw food into mouth and head out the door. Nope, wait, where are my shoes? I spent over 20 minutes trying to find my shoes. Then it occurred to me, I kicked them off to balance better on the front terrace when planting, two days ago? Thank goodness, they were still there.

Dyeing Requires a Lot of Salt

Did I mention I hate deadlines? I really hate the pressure. It adds so much stress. I love dyeing but leisurely-like. I look at the weld in the front and think, oh, perfect. I should wind the superwash fingering wt. yarn and do a batch. But no, I have a whole tray of hemp to dye. I go through this every year. I'd rather be working on my own projects. Business means having an illusion of abundance. You can't just have one color. You must have a rainbow. I will sell mostly unbleached. I know this. But without the other colors, it won't sell as my Canadian peer discovered. Psychology is half of being a successful business. You want people to feel they have choices. Why is natural gray my best seller in both linen and hemp? Because if you want to make a small project like a dish cloth, you want something you know is nontoxic. While my hand-dyeds do not bleed, the customer wants the safety in a gift. Also, who knows what color their friend's kitchen is? The colors are great for making shopping string bags. I mean it all sells but the natural undyed I need more of. Side note: commercially raised cotton dish cloths contain a lot more harmful chemicals that do wash out in your dish water. You just don't even think about the pesticides used to grow cotton. Hemp doesn't need pesticides. (Well unless you have stoners who don't know the different between industrial hemp and the smoking kind.)

Scour in the Shower for an Hour

Which brings me back to today's projects. I need to scour two more pounds of hemp yarn. Then start of Forest green and a saffron yellow, moving on to red. That gives me a start: red, yellow, green, blue, purple, bleached, and natural. Terra cotta is not a big seller. I can work on that later. This gives me enough to fill a tray. Maybe if there is time, I can start on that weld for the fingering weight wool.It's still like cramming for an exam or working on a final project.

Dyeing on the back porch

Note to self: Buy chalk to dye the Inca cotton. There is a good crop of rose leaves this year.

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