Showing posts with label dyeing wool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dyeing wool. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20


"Lakeside Buoys" copyright Michelle L. Palmer

We have a blanket of white this morning with gentle snow falling.
My heart is lakeside... longing for warmth & sunshine.
Ready to dip toes in the water~

These buoys were licensed for notecards and dinner napkins
years ago. A fishing camp I visited nearly 30 years ago.
I couldn't stop photographing buoys!
Wishing I had taken more photographs of the handsome
cabins and boathouses.

I dyed the background wool: ProChem straw with mouse grey and
a touch of periwinkle. Some of the darker areas worked nicely
for the rope shadows. Hooked with #6 and #7 cut wool strips.

Hope you're all staying strong and healthy!
Thank you for stopping by~

Wednesday, May 20

Wool hooked rugs~ color pairing


When I see color, my mind makes a connection.
In early April when I pulled my Plum (ProChem 822) sample from the pot...
I saw lilac petals, deep plum, just before them open & I made a sketch.
Our lilacs are just beginning to open and
it is just the color I hoped for!


Mottle purple, ProChem Violet 817, next to a warm gray texture.

Some colors and textures play so nicely together!
I hook a lot of color into my rugs.
Sometimes it is because I only have small pieces and
I need to mix several (close friends) in order to fill an area.
Other times, I have the most amazing dyed/overdyed
mottled yard of goodness! Plenty to fill a large area.

Thought I would share how I come to my backgrounds and
color planning before I use up the reference pieces~


ProChem Violet #817
I will always call it Caryn's violet, a treasured friend that shared
a sample of dye in a baggie. 
Some friends share eggs & sugar... this is much better for my waistline (giggle)


Inglehoffer horseradish jars are the best little containers
to reuse. With a very curious lab pup I don't leave anything to chance.
Out of the baggie & into the jar!



The dotted wool hooks nicely on a #7 cut.
I didn't have to go smaller on this pattern.
I have this texture in plum, forest green, orange and blue. 
Found all four pieces from different sources.
The butter cream yellow is very soft and plush~
Look how pretty the texture is in the scallop!
A solid would have worked nicely...
However there was a little room for some excitement~


A little area of the background and the
two pieces I am using for it.
The green stripe: I am cutting my strips with the line.
Giving me three different values.
The mottled violet, blue, green goodness does 90% of the work.
I like to add a strip of the bright green stripe for movement and
a line of the blue-green stripe to tie the purples and greens together.
The mottled piece of wool, all by itself would be beautiful.
I wanted to tuck in a little more green.
Mottled wool is a gift from two very talented rug hookers & dyers.


One are of this mottled violet, purple, lavender, green, blue, teal
wool piece... could plan the entire rug!
I have a large project board that I clip my pattern to 
when selecting my colors.
First color, the main subject, the focal point. I want to LOVE this color.
I clip that color beside the rug.
Then I begin thinking about my background.
Sometimes it takes several (all in the family colors) pieces for me
to have enough to fill. Then I want to be sure to have a
highlight, a shadow and some textures.


How different one mottled piece of wool can be!
How do that make this magic happen?
In this image, the wool is more purple and gold...
In the previous (same wool piece) more blue, teal and green!

Hope you're having a great week, Friends!

Friday, February 1

Winter Watering Cans Hooked Rug

 'Winter Watering Cans' copyright Michelle L. Palmer

Pup and I enjoyed a salmon-peachy-hot pink sunrise.
Hello, February!
Lake gray is being pushed back~
So nice to see the sunshine two days in a row!

My watering cans are coming along.
Hope to have this rug finished over the weekend... what to do next!?
I do think I will choose a warmer season (giggle)


Cardinals at the feeder have been all fluffed up to stay warm~
Glad the frigid windchills are moving out.


Sharing progress pictures from weekend to weekend~
This is our Ash tree. Sad to say we have to take it down in the Spring.
The Emerald Ash Borer that is killing so many is the cause.

The tree is dark at the base~
Lighter, lighter and lightest as it touches the sky.


Little pop of color to add a touch of warmth to winter days~


I love old watering cans!
These oldies have weathered many seasons.
The bottoms push out a little when ice builds inside... 
Doesn't bother us~ adds to their charm!
Never stops us from bringing them home from a sale~


Bittersweet foreground~

It's always exciting to begin a new rug project~
Very different from a new painting...
Wool hooking takes a fair amount of time to get a feeling of progress.
As small sections come together interest and excitement builds!
Then it becomes hard to put down the project! 

Hope you're all staying healthy, warm and happy!

Monday, October 1

Wool hooked Donkey~


Jasper & I would like to wish you beautiful October days!

This big fella is a wonderfully cozy wool blanket
while I'm working on him~
He's gaining weight with every strip! 
...I think I am, too! (giggle)

All the best to you, Friends!

Monday, September 24

Donkeys Hooked Rug~


Sweet Jasper & Snickers~ 39" x 30" copyright 2018 Michelle L. Palmer

These furry loves have been very patient!
A beautiful summer... a very hot summer, I started this rug in early July.
Too much wool to have covering my lap until the cooler days arrived.

In a blink our evenings are chilly and the donkeys are perfect
to relax with after work~


I was a little nervous to begin Jasper...
He is the sweetest fella and I hope to capture a likeness.
From a distance animals have a general similarity~
Up close, they're unique.
Up close, they're endearing.
Sweet.
Tender.
They touch and come close~

I'll share pictures as Jasper and Snickers fill in more~
Working with #4, #6 and #7 strips on primitive linen.

Wishing you joy-filled Autumn days, Friends!


Friday, May 25

Love you to the moon hooked rug


Love You to the Moon & Back copyright Michelle L. Palmer

From punch needle to wool hooked rug!
I'm not sure how many of my punch needle works will make their
way to being hooked rugs~ this one holds a special place in my heart.



The colors are soft and subtle.


The watercolor painting is part of my licensing portfolio~
I think it would make a fun garden flag!


As I began hooking the heart I realized the purples that I  had dyed
for the graphic steps were a bit too cool...
Sue at Liberty Cottage (Canandaigua, NY) had the perfect colors!

  
Little bird had a story to tell and it went well into the night~


Loop by loop~
Punch needle is my favorite hobby but I do love to hook wool, too!

Hope your Friday is off to a great start, Friends!
Safe travels as you journey this Memorial Day weekend~

Tuesday, April 17

Wool hooked moon~


'Love You to the Moon & Back' copyright Michelle L. Palmer

Inspired by my punch needle pattern~
Nice to relax in the evenings with some wool strips & these two!


Just finished a new watercolor collection being considered for fabric~
Working on the remaining designs for my 2020 calendar~
and...
Catching up.
Catching up on fun projects and household chores
before the weather breaks and Spring arrives!
Then the garden will be demanding some love and attention~
How can anyone say no to the gardens?

Hope you're all staying safe through these fierce Spring storms~
Hope your week is filled with sunny, warmer days!

Wednesday, April 11

Hooked Rug Milkweed Monarch


"Milkweed Monarch" copyright 2018 Michelle L. Palmer
22" x 28" Hooked with #4 and #6 wool cuts.

It has been so nice to see Monarch butterflies in our gardens again!
I took several caterpillar photographs last summer...
The perfect inspiration for a wool rug.
Monarchs just love common milkweed and I don't mind sharing space with
the beautiful plant in our perennial beds.

We have an invasive weed, 'Black Swallow-wort,' that monarchs mistake for
milkweed. The weed is poisonous to the larvae. The plant also crowds out
Common Milkweed. Our region is working to keep the invasive plant controlled.
The best way to remove Black Swallow-wort is to dig the entire root ball.
Trying to pull the weed is near impossible~ it nearly always breaks off.
When walking along trails I pull the seed pods off and
dispose of them in our household garbage.


A little snippet of a wool rug I just finished... 
Painting, punching, hooking & dreaming of flowers
while waiting on the gardens to wake!

Hope you're having a wonderful week, Friends!

Friday, August 11


Hope your Friday is off to a sunny start, Sweet Friends!
This project was great fun... my third wool hooking project~

I was humming, "Here we go loopty loo~ here we loopty li"
the whole time I was hooking this...
Do hope a new tune comes in for the next projects planned!
(giggle)


I always find a favorite part in my art pieces~
Favorite wash in one area of my watercolors paintings.
Favorite 'happy accident' in my thumbnail sketch/illustration...
(So often becoming the main design!)
Favorite color combination in a punch needle piece...
How flowers cascade in one of our gardens~

The pumpkin is my favorite part of this hooked piece.
It has new wool that I dyed with a friend.
It has wool gathered from my favorite craft thrift.
Wool from an old skirt...
Wool from my mother in law that was hers & her mothers hooking wool.
Wool from my mother in law that she had procured from 
an estate sale of an elderly woman who had hooked rugs~


Loop by loop woven together!
Just like us!

Hope you have a wonderful weekend, Friends!

Friday, June 30

Dyeing wool with acid dyes~


I have been taking a few hours each week to felt repurposed wool.
I am able to make new colors by using some of the dye that bleeds off.
Summertime is my planning & gardening time.
I will hopefully have all of the colors needed to rug hook
some new projects once the snow files again. (Not in any hurry for that) ;)

This week was my first experience using acid dyes!
We used Jacquard brand... perfect for small batches.
Success!


I had gathered these small jars 10+ years ago for
dyeing some of my wool roving to needle felt~


I will make a small swatch of the colors & make notes of mixes.

We followed all suggested safety precautions.
Dust masks, rubber gloves, proper ventilation & separate pots & utensils.
Followed the simple directions on the package.
There are directions on their site, too.

Jacquard:  https://www.jacquardproducts.com/acid-dye.html
How acid dye works: 
http://www.dharmatrading.com/home/did-you-know-how-acid-dye-works.html

I think I will be trying for turquoise and aqua next...
Some sunny yellow and deep golds!

Hope you have a wonderful weekend, Friends!