Dyeing Wool Views
HOW CAN YOU USE THE MICROWAVE OVEN FOR DYEING WOOL? * Jenny Hopper, May 10, 1996 SAFETY - Opinions differ about using your Food microwave for dyeing because of the possibility of the migration of dye molecules (possibly carcinogenic) into the microwave lining during dyeing and the future possibility of these later being released into food and being ingested. If possible use another microwave ONLY FOR DYEING - here, we can often buy second hand microwaves very cheaply which are ideal for dyeing. A basic microwave is satisfactory, you can do without a turntable or variable power. An alternative is to use several layers of plastic to contain whatever is being dyed so there is no leakage, or covered dishes (kept only for dyeing and never used for food) and put them into plastic bags (microwave safe) also and then to thoroughly clean the microwave after using it for dyeing. The responsibility is yours.
Can I dye my gray wool blazer blue? - dyeing wool jacket I tore my pants for a business suit and I stayed with charcoal wool coat. Not able to find similar colors / materials, and it is too bright to be used as a simple jacket. I want to dye. Can I do the color on a blue jacket? Can damage the tissue? This will probably change the keys, too?
What fibers to use: Kool-Aid dyeing works only on animal fibers: wool, mohair, alpaca -- even human hair! It doesn't work on cotton or synthetics, though, so use pure wool yarn for best results. Blended yarns containing a high percentage of wool do work, but the non-animal part of the yarn won't take the dye and you won't get very saturated colors. You can use this to your advantage: a cotton-wrapped wool boucle will come out colored with a white wrap. You need not use only uncolored yarns, either. Start with a natural tweed or over-dye a pastel. You can also dye rovings to great effect with this method. Just card and spin a few colors together once they're dry. You'll feel like an artist in no time!
Be sure and write down the amount of dye and the weight of the fleece you used so you can reproduce a color you like. If you want to be more exact when dyeing wool, weigh out separate amounts of your fleece and soak it in soapy water in individual canning jars. Just use a drop or two of liquid dish soap for each jar and approximately one and 1/2 cups of warm water.