This past weekend I attending a Hand Dyeing Workshop at my favorite shop, The Cat and Crow, and it was pretty awesome.
We had a little lesson in the color wheel (which was much needed, because I haven’t taken an art class in approximately 13 years), learned a tiny bit of the science behind it all, but mostly just had fun.
There were only 3 of us in the class, and we each bought 2 full skeins of yarn to dye, but we were also given a couple of small sample-sized gifties to try out the various techniques on. We did some hand painting of skeins and blanks, as well as some kettle dying.
For the hand painting of skeins, I used a syringe to dye a variety of blues/greens onto my yarn (at they shop, they only buy 11 colors of dye, and then they mix those 11 in various recipes to create their large inventory of colors). Then I used a spray bottle to add some dots of pink from the other side of the color wheel.
I really liked dyeing the yarn blanks (plain white yarn, knit up with a knitting machine into a long rectangle). On both my sample and my full sized blank, I ended up dying a gradient. Gradients are very popular in the knitting world these days (see both my Alaska Hat and my Baby Cardigan). For my gradients, I decided to just do a single color and fade from light to dark (all with the same dye, just different amounts of vinegar water to dilute it). I am VERY pleased with how they turned out, and am already knitting up a hat with my green gradient yarn that I dyed. (Finished product here).
For the kettle dyeing, we put our mini sample skeins into boiling hot water (or was it vinegar water?) and then poured the dye directly onto the yarn within the water. There was a lot less control here, but I was also very impressed with how vibrant the colors turned out (it reminded me a lot of Malabrigo yarn–a very good thing!).
Here is a photo of the yarn drying (it’s cut off from the photo, but for the three on the right, there are grocery bags holding soup cans hanging from the bottom to get the kinks out because yarn that had been previously knit up into a blank):

And here is a picture of what it all looked like after I wound it up (turns out twisting a hank into a pretty skein is pretty easy!):

It was a really fun experience, and I’m very pleased with my yarns (especially the gradients!). The Cat and Crow offers an Open Dye Day every few months, and I think I will definitely be taking advantage of that the next time it comes around.