Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Winter Ice
Labels:
ice branches,
ice maple,
ice rose hips,
winter ice
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
DYEING WOOL Fast and Easy
I had read about dyeing wool with food coloring but I doubted how effective it would be. I thought the colors would be muddy, muted or bleed easily. Wrong, wrong, wrong. This was so incredibly easy! You will find various methods posted online. I combined idea's and came up with a method I found to be extra easy and relatively neat and tidy. This is 'The Skillful Bee' method:
1. Fill quart jars 1/2 full with water and place in canning pot filled to about the same level as water in jars. Just before it starts to boil, turn off the heat.
2. Add about a teaspoon of food coloring. I used gel food coloring, which is concentrated.
3. Add about 1/4 cup white vinegar to each jar and stir.
4. Put a wad of wool batting or roving in the jar. Make sure the wool is completely immersed.
5. After about a half hour, remove the wool. Rinse with water that starts slightly warm then change to cool water so you don't shock the wool temperature all at once. Rinse till water is clear. Gently squeeze out excess water and lay wool on towel to dry.
I am thrilled with the results. The colors are vibrant and colorfast. I didn't have to worry about using harsh products. It was easy to clean up and super cheap! ( I got my wool for FREE from a local petting farm...but I did have to pay to have it cleaned and carded)
I can't wait to start felting with my new colorful wool!
NOTES and OBSERVATIONS: I added more wool to the jars because I thought I could squeeze a little more in. Some happy accidents that occurred were that the wool on the inside of some of the larger, compacted wads didn't get fully saturated so I got some blended colors (very pretty). Also, I found I had to add more vinegar with subsequent additions or the color didn't penetrate. The color on the subsequent wads of wool were less saturated, as shown in the yellow example below. I put in a total of three wads of wool, each about 10 minutes apart. I added a couple of tablespoons of additional vinegar with each new wad.
I had read that the wool should be soaked first. I'm not a very patient artist, so I didn't soak mine. There was some uneven coloring, which I liked. If you want smooth, even coloring you should probably soak the wool in clear water first.
A little bag to hold my glasses....
I laid out my design on a cookie sheet with a piece of bubble wrap on it. Then I added some hot soapy water and rubbed it back and forth and all around...for about 20 minutes. I wrapped it around a 12" long piece of foam swim tube (dollar store), then wrapped the bubble wrap around it and taped the edges closed. I rolled it back and forth until it shrunk to the thickness I wanted. Yes...it all seems very unlikely...but it works!
A little stitchery to add some detail...and a little white mother of pearl button.
I stitched up the sides and added a snap closure.
This will keep my glasses safe inside my 'purse jungle'.
A Matryoshka for my beautiful granddaughter...
First, I laid out a very basic pattern of colors and felted it as described previously.
Then I added more details by using the needle felting method. I placed pieces of wool where I wanted them and repeatedly poked a felting needle (available at craft stores) through the wool to meld the wool together. This is good, mindless relaxation at it's best. Think of it as painting with wool.
Once I had most of the details on, I used embroidery thread and some beads to embellish my design. Eventually, I wanted the Matroyshka to be 3-dimensional so I wrapped the flat piece of wool around wool stuffing into a cylindrical shape and used a felting needle to meld it all together. It's really fun to 'sculpt' with wool! There are no sewn seams...only wool felted together to make a nice, solid shape.
Labels:
dyeing wool,
dyeing wool with food coloring,
felt matroyshka,
felted mouse,
wool eyeglass case,
wool felt matryoshka,
wool felt nesting doll,
wool felt Russian doll,
wool felting
Monday, January 6, 2014
Mackinaw Island
Mackinaw Island - Grand Hotel
Mackinaw is a pleasant island located in northern Michigan. No cars, only bikes and horses. It has everything from touristy shops to unspoiled nature. If you despise touristy shops then I suggest you stay off the main strip. (But then you won't get any fudge...and afterall, isn't it really all about the fudge?) Take a pleasant stroll, or better yet, bike ride, around the island. And getting there is half the fun! Northern Michigan is spectacular in any season. To get to Mackinac you must take a ferry. That's when the fun begins. Look how blue the water is!
This is 'Michigan Blue'.
Every guest room is different. This was ours.
Just outside the hotel doors is a golf course. Lovely place to sit in the sun.
Ode to Rainbow Chip Frosting
Ode to Rainbow Chip
Hey, Rainbow Chip...
Did ratings slip?
What the flip?
Discontinued favorite frosting
found on eBay
but it's costing!
Hate to knock her,
but Betty Crocker
is off her rocker!
It's the end of an era......
(sniff, sniff, sob)
Wedding PIE!
Let them eat PIE!
This fall wedding was the perfect mix of elegance and comfort. Tasteful décor and extra tasty wedding PIE helped make this event a true success. The bride and groom were wed at a beautiful apple orchard/outdoor wedding chapel along Michigan's western shore in a delightful town called Saugatuck. There is a well-known bakery nearby that produces some of the tastiest pies this side of the Mississippi! What a pleasant surprise it was to guests when the pies...and not cake...were served. Kudo's to the newlyweds for serving up a fabulous meal in a beautiful setting!
Not a crumb remained.....
Labels:
apple orchard,
apple wedding,
fall wedding,
Saugatuck,
saugatuck wedding,
wedding chapel,
wedding pie
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