Yay, I guessed right! Proving my worth as a regular watcher of Will It Dye Also can I say I absolutely love your outfit this episode? The yellow shirt with colourful sweater... Wonderful. Cheered me right up. Good week to you and your curly potato boy.
I laughed out loud. You're absolutely right. Your mental health can be affected by natural dyeing. I've been dyeing for 8 years and tried a lot. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. I wait every year for my grape hyacinths to bloom and for the very young horse chestnuts to fall off the tree. I've had some lovely results from them. But sometimes the same plants give a hmmmm color ;-) Why I don't know, but it is so nice to try them all. I don't want to send you down another rabbit hole but you can make an Indigo vat with sweet potatoes! A warning though if natural dyeing is impacting your mental health Indigo will do that x10. An indigo vat will turn out to be a living breathing organism on its own, that can test you to the max, but it is so worth it when it works :-)
With little children i was always looking for save dyestuff. Eastereggcolors (all kind of bright colors), Avocadoshells (light rose), Calendulaflowers (yellow). Sometimes i experimented with plants from the garden ( lovely sad beige 😂).
there are some purple leafed cherry plumb trees in my city which I was curious about both the fruit and the leaves. the fruit did not dye (though the dyebath itself turned a gorgeous fuscia when the alum mordanted wool was added) but the leaves made a pretty dirty beige which turned green in an iron after bath.
Last year I deadheaded my mum’s dahlias and took all of the flowers. I used alum for mordant and the result was a lovely peach leaning orange colour. I would definitely do it again! I also love dyeing with indigo. I want to try growing my own
As a botanist, I have an unfair advantage, so I'm not voting. I know anthocyanins the blue/purple pigments in plants are fun to play with using pH,like red cabbage, blue corn, etc. in an edible context.
They are the water-soluble pigments that go from red to purple to blue depending on pH. Add some vinegar to red cabbage or some baking soda- very dramatic shift, but not lightfast for dying, sadly@@MijnWolden
Unashamedly Aragorn, mm mm mmmmm !!! And I must admit to one of the bad guy elephant riders catching my eye - everytime I watch the movies (every year between my birthday and new year, for the last 20 yrs I think - thats when my son bought me the Box set Extended Version with hours and hours of extra's) Yup I am a Hobbit and LOTR geek, from when I first read the books (which I still have) at the age of 17 and watching the animated movie that was made in 1978, which miraculously was showing in a tiny little movie theatre in Hillbrow, Johannesburg for my 21st birthday, 39 yrs ago.
Hi Jente, I hope you and Dries are both OK xx ❣️❣️❣️ Thankyou so much for sharing this video podcast. Great Intro !!!!😂😂 I love your Dying experiments,🥔🌟 I wasn't sure what colou the purple potato skins would yield. I'm afraid that I didn't get the right answer. 😮 I can't wait to see what you're going to be using in your next experiment.🌟🌟🤔 Happy Dying Fibre Friend Take care and stay safe Lots of love and Big Hugs to you both Jen xxxx ❤️❤️❤️❤️🫂🫂🫂🫂🐕
Super cool expriment! I'm a bit sad that it didn't dye pink/purple though, that would have been amazing! My favourite was always Legolas, I have a huge weak spot for wise old characters, and for people fighting with bow and arrow... (Did you ever read the Ranger's Apprentice/Grijze Jager series? I feel like they might have been your jam, but I don't know if they were as popular in Belgium as they were in the Netherlands)
As noted in a comment elsewhere, I tried red hibiscus flowers. Since I didn't have any alum I just threw in some salt. The dye bath was a nice dark purply-red but the result was more of a mauve-greige. (I did also dab a little vinegar on the little scraps of cotton and linen I threw in with the wool after I removed them. The vinegar made them go slightly greenish but they dried grey with only a memory of green left behind.) When the hibiscus flowers drop off the bushes and land on the path and decay they go a very deep bluish-purple (and really slimy and nasty!) and I had been hoping to capture that colour when I tried dyeing with them. Now I am wondering if I could ferment them and then see if that would get that colour. I also need to invest in some alum - but I need my knee to be up to driving so I can go to the shop that has alum. If we're talking about vegetable dyes, has anyone tried beetroot? A couple of people have mentioned anthocyanins in red vegetables - so that might be relevant for beetroot.
This video reminds me of when we got purple cauliflower in the mystery vegetable box that my husband and I did last summer! We made cauliflower pizza dough which involved squeezing the cooked and blended cauliflower in a dish towel. The cloth turned a beautiful purple color that unfortunately washed out completely. I can't remember whether I tried to steam set it or simmer it in alum solution but since it didn't stain even a little bit I doubt it would work at all. So if you get purple cauliflower and end up with some pretty purple liquid, I would suggest avoiding the temptation. Purple vegetables seem to have a lot of color to give off, but the dye is so fugitive it will fade in less time it took to dye the material!
As a general non scientific rule very little food will dye fibers. If it dyes anything usually they fade quickly. You forgot the mystery yellow as a common dye color. Keep up the fun videos.
I blame you entirely for me throwing some scoured wool into my cooking pot after I had been cooking red cabbage (I didn't mordant it though, so just got very pale blue on the rinse)
@@MijnWolden if it pleases the court: it is an excellent way to make choatically coloured dinner however, even if you have to get your yarn coloured in other ways. Have enjoyed blue mashed potatoes for putting them in the same water to cook, a very dark purple risotto, and a pastel purple hummus. Complimentary sweetcorn also works well, because the shiny skins on the kernels resist the colour, so it really pops
@@saraht855 - Chaotically coloured dinner! I love that! One of our family’s staples is ‘Barbie Salad’. Boiled and cooled red beets, cubed. Add cubed apple, endive (Chicons in French), and a starch of choice, like cooked and cooled pasta or cubed boiled and cooled potatoes. Also add a protein of your choice. For meat eaters, cubed chicken or some crispy bacon. For vegetarians, perhaps cubed cheese or feta. For vegans, add your selection of vegan cheese or some crispy fried tofu, or pulses. Add crispy nuts if you feel like it. Pour over a creamy dressing of your choice. Toss. Allow to stand in the fridge, toss some more. You get a barbie pink, violently and almost radio-active pink end result. If you’re feeling fancy, add some croutons. A meal in itself. Omit the protein and use only the apple and veggies for a vegetable dish. Around Halloween, especially if there are gore-enthusiastic kids around, call it Blood Clot and Poison Salad.
Try using the peels fresh or freeze them to prevent them from oxidising. Then steep in a very acidic solution to liberate the anthocyanins. This way, you wont need the alum mordant on wool and no, I wont spoil the surprise and talk about the possible colours. Iron, tin and copper can all be used as modifiers to alter the colour. Heb een lieve dag, Jente.
My guess is it will not dye. I’ve never had purple sweet potatoes change the color of my food or stain my cutting board. But I am not a dyer so who knows if I’ll be right!
So who is your LOTR crush/favourite character?
A chance for Faramir, Captain of Gondor, to show his quality!
I Think At Last We Understand One Another, @@countbaldwiniv
@@TheHistoryHikers War Will Make Corpses Of Us All
The Shire Must Be A Truly Great Realm, Master @@countbaldwiniv Where Gardeners Are Held In High Honor
Arwen and Pippin, which really says a lot about my tastes in men and women LOL
I fell in love with Haldir and cried at his death at Helms Deep.
My new favorite late night show! Also, totally Sam. Dependable, snuggly, cute.
Yes 😁
Yay, I guessed right! Proving my worth as a regular watcher of Will It Dye
Also can I say I absolutely love your outfit this episode? The yellow shirt with colourful sweater... Wonderful. Cheered me right up.
Good week to you and your curly potato boy.
Thank you 😁 I do dress for the dopamine
Mythbuster vibes intensifying...
One day I'll grow a moustache as glorious as Jamie's
I laughed out loud. You're absolutely right. Your mental health can be affected by natural dyeing. I've been dyeing for 8 years and tried a lot. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. I wait every year for my grape hyacinths to bloom and for the very young horse chestnuts to fall off the tree. I've had some lovely results from them. But sometimes the same plants give a hmmmm color ;-) Why I don't know, but it is so nice to try them all.
I don't want to send you down another rabbit hole but you can make an Indigo vat with sweet potatoes! A warning though if natural dyeing is impacting your mental health Indigo will do that x10. An indigo vat will turn out to be a living breathing organism on its own, that can test you to the max, but it is so worth it when it works :-)
Would it also work with woad? That's easier to come by for me...
With little children i was always looking for save dyestuff. Eastereggcolors (all kind of bright colors), Avocadoshells (light rose), Calendulaflowers (yellow). Sometimes i experimented with plants from the garden ( lovely sad beige 😂).
Plants from the garden are always a surprise :D
there are some purple leafed cherry plumb trees in my city which I was curious about both the fruit and the leaves. the fruit did not dye (though the dyebath itself turned a gorgeous fuscia when the alum mordanted wool was added) but the leaves made a pretty dirty beige which turned green in an iron after bath.
Don't you love experimenting?
Last year I deadheaded my mum’s dahlias and took all of the flowers. I used alum for mordant and the result was a lovely peach leaning orange colour. I would definitely do it again!
I also love dyeing with indigo. I want to try growing my own
PS my lotr crush was Eowyn
How did your mom feel about her dahlia's? :D
@@MijnWolden I asked her first! They were going in the compost otherwise
As a botanist, I have an unfair advantage, so I'm not voting. I know anthocyanins the blue/purple pigments in plants are fun to play with using pH,like red cabbage, blue corn, etc. in an edible context.
As a not-botanist: antocywhatnot? 😂
How much red cabbage do you use
They are the water-soluble pigments that go from red to purple to blue depending on pH. Add some vinegar to red cabbage or some baking soda- very dramatic shift, but not lightfast for dying, sadly@@MijnWolden
Hi Jente, Avocado skins will give a pleasant pink colour which is light safe when mordanted. Cheers-Laura
I know, I have a video where I tried 😁
I love the Ents
They are great!
You are a riot
😎
I dyed some yarn with Dahlia flowers on the weekend
Nice! How did it go?
Aragorn girlie 100%. He was so kind with animals. T^T
He is!
Hi. I enjoy your channel and your enthusiasm! I would like to see how you made your niddy noddy and how you take the yarn off.
I believe I talk about how I made it in one of my tour de fleece vlogs of last year ☺️
Unashamedly Aragorn, mm mm mmmmm !!! And I must admit to one of the bad guy elephant riders catching my eye - everytime I watch the movies (every year between my birthday and new year, for the last 20 yrs I think - thats when my son bought me the Box set Extended Version with hours and hours of extra's) Yup I am a Hobbit and LOTR geek, from when I first read the books (which I still have) at the age of 17 and watching the animated movie that was made in 1978, which miraculously was showing in a tiny little movie theatre in Hillbrow, Johannesburg for my 21st birthday, 39 yrs ago.
We usually watch the movies around my husband's birthday, but this Saturday I'm joining my friends for a marathon 😁
Galadriel. Ok but also gollum. And I predict sad gray beige
Fierce choices!
thank you for the inspiration. I have a garden, and thought trying black currents to see if i can make a hot pink or magenta
Good luck!
Hi Jente, I hope you and Dries are both OK xx ❣️❣️❣️
Thankyou so much for sharing this video podcast.
Great Intro !!!!😂😂
I love your Dying experiments,🥔🌟
I wasn't sure what colou the purple potato skins would yield.
I'm afraid that I didn't get the right answer. 😮
I can't wait to see what you're going to be using in your next experiment.🌟🌟🤔
Happy Dying Fibre Friend
Take care and stay safe
Lots of love and Big Hugs to you both Jen xxxx ❤️❤️❤️❤️🫂🫂🫂🫂🐕
It was a trick question maybe 🤭
I dyed some wool in onion peels and lots of acorns. Turned out dark yellow beige. Not bad for a first try.
Dark yellow beige... That's an interesting combo!
Super cool expriment! I'm a bit sad that it didn't dye pink/purple though, that would have been amazing!
My favourite was always Legolas, I have a huge weak spot for wise old characters, and for people fighting with bow and arrow... (Did you ever read the Ranger's Apprentice/Grijze Jager series? I feel like they might have been your jam, but I don't know if they were as popular in Belgium as they were in the Netherlands)
I haven't, but my husband did and he was a big fan! My series as a teenager was more Darren Shan's vampire books...
Boromir was my lotr crush. I can fix him :)
I bet you can 😉
As noted in a comment elsewhere, I tried red hibiscus flowers. Since I didn't have any alum I just threw in some salt. The dye bath was a nice dark purply-red but the result was more of a mauve-greige. (I did also dab a little vinegar on the little scraps of cotton and linen I threw in with the wool after I removed them. The vinegar made them go slightly greenish but they dried grey with only a memory of green left behind.)
When the hibiscus flowers drop off the bushes and land on the path and decay they go a very deep bluish-purple (and really slimy and nasty!) and I had been hoping to capture that colour when I tried dyeing with them. Now I am wondering if I could ferment them and then see if that would get that colour. I also need to invest in some alum - but I need my knee to be up to driving so I can go to the shop that has alum.
If we're talking about vegetable dyes, has anyone tried beetroot? A couple of people have mentioned anthocyanins in red vegetables - so that might be relevant for beetroot.
I hope your knee gets better soon!
@@MijnWolden: Thank you! I'm at the physiotherapy stage now. (I broke it. 😥)
Time for a Lord of the Rings spinning/knitting marathon with all your patrons!
Oho! Great idea!
There is a Smeagol in all of us.
Precious...
This video reminds me of when we got purple cauliflower in the mystery vegetable box that my husband and I did last summer! We made cauliflower pizza dough which involved squeezing the cooked and blended cauliflower in a dish towel. The cloth turned a beautiful purple color that unfortunately washed out completely. I can't remember whether I tried to steam set it or simmer it in alum solution but since it didn't stain even a little bit I doubt it would work at all. So if you get purple cauliflower and end up with some pretty purple liquid, I would suggest avoiding the temptation. Purple vegetables seem to have a lot of color to give off, but the dye is so fugitive it will fade in less time it took to dye the material!
I have read the same about Red cabbages yes...
As a general non scientific rule very little food will dye fibers. If it dyes anything usually they fade quickly. You forgot the mystery yellow as a common dye color. Keep up the fun videos.
Ah yes, but mystery yellow is mostly almost sad beige? 😅
I blame you entirely for me throwing some scoured wool into my cooking pot after I had been cooking red cabbage (I didn't mordant it though, so just got very pale blue on the rinse)
Apparently both red cabbage and purple sweet potato aren't really good dyestuff, so I'm sorry for making you do that.
@@MijnWolden if it pleases the court: it is an excellent way to make choatically coloured dinner however, even if you have to get your yarn coloured in other ways. Have enjoyed blue mashed potatoes for putting them in the same water to cook, a very dark purple risotto, and a pastel purple hummus. Complimentary sweetcorn also works well, because the shiny skins on the kernels resist the colour, so it really pops
@@saraht855 - Chaotically coloured dinner! I love that!
One of our family’s staples is ‘Barbie Salad’. Boiled and cooled red beets, cubed. Add cubed apple, endive (Chicons in French), and a starch of choice, like cooked and cooled pasta or cubed boiled and cooled potatoes. Also add a protein of your choice. For meat eaters, cubed chicken or some crispy bacon. For vegetarians, perhaps cubed cheese or feta. For vegans, add your selection of vegan cheese or some crispy fried tofu, or pulses. Add crispy nuts if you feel like it. Pour over a creamy dressing of your choice. Toss. Allow to stand in the fridge, toss some more. You get a barbie pink, violently and almost radio-active pink end result. If you’re feeling fancy, add some croutons. A meal in itself. Omit the protein and use only the apple and veggies for a vegetable dish. Around Halloween, especially if there are gore-enthusiastic kids around, call it Blood Clot and Poison Salad.
I wonder if red beets would dye well. And if the dye is lightfast.
Try using the peels fresh or freeze them to prevent them from oxidising. Then steep in a very acidic solution to liberate the anthocyanins. This way, you wont need the alum mordant on wool and no, I wont spoil the surprise and talk about the possible colours. Iron, tin and copper can all be used as modifiers to alter the colour. Heb een lieve dag, Jente.
And will they stay or is it a case of fugitive dye?
@@MijnWolden It's a pretty stable dye for a natural, much more stable than avocado.
bLack bean broth (water) dyes a nice sage green.
Thanks 😁
Did the potatoes stain your hands while peeling them? Maybe they don't have enough pigment, but good experiment❤
I frankly don't remember, they were very muddy is what I know
Maybe purple carrots will work better. Orange carrot works passably well.
If I can get my hands on those I'll try!
@@MijnWolden plant some seeds now ;)
My guess is it will not dye. I’ve never had purple sweet potatoes change the color of my food or stain my cutting board. But I am not a dyer so who knows if I’ll be right!
Staining and dyeing are not the same in any case 😁
@@MijnWolden How so? Isn’t dyeing basically just intentional staining?
FARAMIR 4 EVER!!!!
He is the best human of the franchise
…Would you hate me if I admitted that I’ve never seen LOTR 🫣
No, but I will urge you to watch/read asap. Date night with Ryan maybe?