Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Wool Dyeing Tutorial

Over the last few years we have had some great wool projects shown at our Material Girls meetings. I always wanted to try one but $30 a yard the wool was way out of my budget. Even when I found a bit on sale and thought about attempting a project I could never find the exact color I wanted.

All this changed when I discovered two things 1)Savers/DI/Goodwill and 2)Wilton Dyes. After my first trip to the DI for wool I was hooked; $5 for a 100% wool shirt, yes please! I went a little crazy but still had a problem because despite combing the racks I still couldn't find all the colors I wanted. Kool-Aid and Wilton Icing colors to the rescue! After a few hours reading up on other's dyeing experiences (mostly wool yarn) I decided to give it a try and surprisingly it worked FANTASTIC! I ran straight over to Rachel's house and next thing I knew we were up to our elbows in dye baths and had a rainbow of wool in beautiful colors.


A few months ago Rachel brought her beautiful rainbow of wool and we talked about the dyeing process, but I thought it might be helpful to do a little tutorial in case you are interested in trying it for yourself. The process is very simple and you can get great results using materials you probably have on hand, no special tools or dyes needed.

Materials:

Wool Fabric (100% wool will dye the best however Rachel has gotten some interesting results with wool blends. If you are going thrifting the best places to look for wool garments are in ladies coats, skirts and blazers and mens suit jackets)
Large dutch oven for dye bath
Clear or white glass or bowl for mixing colors
Spoon or knife for mixing color
White vinegar
Food Coloring (Wilton Icing Colors, Kool-Aid or plain food coloring)
Gloves (unless you want a green thumb :-)


Ok, lets get started....

1. Soak your wool in a sink or bowl of hot water for at least 10 minutes. This helps the color to distribute evenly later.


2. Fill your dutch oven with enough water to cover your wool once it's added. I usually just fill it about 5". The amount of water isn't as important as it is to have enough to soak your fabric and allow for a little movement of the dye solution. Add about 1/8 cup of white vinegar if you want a modeled look. Bring to a simmer.

3. While you wool is soaking and your water is heating mix your color in a white or clear bowl filled with about 1/2 cup of warm water. I like to use a clear or white bowl because it is easier to see what color you are making. Because there is no real "recipe" for mixing the colors this is nice. Depending on the intensity of color you want you will probably end up using about 1/2 teaspoon total dye (but don't quote me on it). Stir the dye until dissolved. You can test your color by dipping a paper towel in the solution. This is not exact but will at least give you an idea of what color you are concocting. I have found that unless you want a very vibrant color it is best to add a little brown to almost any color. If you are using Kool-Aid, purple works well to mute the colors a bit.


4. When you are happy with your color add it to the simmering water. If you have added vinegar already it will smell, sorry about that :-) Give the mixture a little stir to make sure any bits of color are all incorporated. Squeeze out your soaking wool and add it to the dye bath. Give that a little stir too to make sure all of the wool gets wet. It should start taking up the color immediately and if it has been sufficiently soaked prior to dyeing it should not float after a bit of stirring.


(this wool still needed a little stirring to sink in. Any floating like this will create more modeling in your fabric)

5. Allow the dye bath to simmer for 10-15 minutes or until one of two things happen A) you are happy with the color achieved (this could happen after 30 seconds so don't feel like it needs to stay in the bath if you like the color) or B) The dye bath is exhausted and all the color has been absorbed by your wool. The picture below shows the dye bath water in a clear cup after it has been exhausted.

Sometimes this takes 2 minutes and sometimes it never happens because I'm either too impatient to wait or the fabric is just done soaking up that color. The main thing is that you are happy with the color. If you're not, mix up some more dye and add it to the simmering water and play with the color until you are happy. No need to start over.

6. After the dyeing is complete turn off the heat and carefully remove the wool. I like to use tongs and put it into a bowl to transfer to the sink. Give your wool a cool rinse and when you can comfortably handle it squeeze out the excess water. There should be very little if any color rinsed away. Allow to drip dry or throw in the dryer.

Below are the completed pieces of wool dyed in this tutorial. Each is shown dyed as well as what it looked like originally. Don't be afraid to try dyeing colored and patterned pieces of fabric, sometimes they turn out the best!


Good Luck! Have fun thrifting and dyeing! Let me know if you have any questions!

Lori

3 comments:

Susan Grande said...

Hi, thanks for the encouragement to use good old wool clothing to recycle!
Do you have any ideas about dry cleaning chemicals in the wool before you dye it? I´m having an old piece of wool coating dry-cleaned to re-make an old wool coat I own. I hope just soaking the fabric in water before dyeing it will work.
I want to overdye the heather gray coating (blue-green, I´m thinking, to go with the royal blue coat) and I just had it dry-cleaned, along with the old wool coat, which needed cleaning desperately.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Susan Grande

Anonymous said...

Hi, thanks for the tutorial! I recently bought a lovely wool crepe skirt in a consignment shop, but once I wore it out in the sunlight, I realized it is dark navy, and not black, as I originally perceived. It fits perfectly now, but will not zip if it shrinks even a little bit. What are my chances of having a zip-able (not-shrunken) skirt if I use the method described here? Also, any tips on how to mix a black dark enough to cover navy? Thanks again!

Unknown said...

In my experience with wool you cannot get it wet and have it not shrink. It can only be dry cleaned. If the skirt is a washable wool and says it can be washed then you may have a chance but you have to boil the wool for it to take the dye and I am sure this would shrink it. You could always try it if you aren't going to like the skirt the way it is anyway. Good luck!