I’ve been thinking about trying my hand at dyeing yarn, thanks to the enablers at various Ravelry groups devoted to that very thing. I knew it was meant to be when I went to my local supermarket last week, and found some good-sized Granitewear enamel pots on sale. They’re meant for cooking corn (hence, the lovely (?) yellow color), but at $3.75, it was too good a deal to pass up for yarn. I have some Jacquard Acid dyes on hand, but, because I really can’t do anything the easy way, I dug through the dyes I had already prepared to do some Pysanky Easter Eggs. No, mine did not come out anything like the ones on that website, but that’s not the point. Since I only used a small bit of the batches of dye I had prepared, I figured I’d just go ahead and use those. Just because they’d been sitting around for, I don’t know, maybe a year and a half, was no reason not to use them. I followed (sort of) the directions in this book for the hot pour method, since this seemed to me to be the least-messy introduction to dyeing. I soaked the yarn (Knitpicks bare sock yarn) and then, after about an hour, started heating it with some vinegar added:

Once it was in the neighborhood of 190 degrees (recommended in the book), I added yellow:

This didn’t strike as quickly as I would have liked, I don’t know whether it was too cool, or if there wasn’t enough vinegar, but, it’s a learning process, right? Then, when the yellow was exhausted, I added turquoise:

I LIKE IT! After I added the turquoise, I hit the yarn with a little more vinegar, so the yellow areas wouldn’t blend completely into the green. I simmered for 10 minutes, then put it on the back porch to cool. The dye wasn’t exhausted at this point, and the yellow was slowly turning green, so I put more vinegar in, and WOW! The water was suddenly clear, and I knew the colors wouldn’t be mixing anymore. I wish I had added the extra vinegar earlier, after the green first went in, for more color changes, but I really like the way it came out. Once it cooled, I rinsed the skein, and no color came out in the rinse water. Here it is hanging out on the line drying:

Once it’s dry, I’ll put up a pic of the finished skein. With the rain and humidity we’re having, it may take several days to dry. Overall, I really like the subtle color changes in here-it reminds me of Spring, with all the different shades of green.