I know I said not to bother with Calendula officinalis, but as I was ridding my sadly very small weld patch from a dandelion infestation, I realized I had stopped at solar dyeing last time and couldn’t remember that I’d ever done a hot dye bath.
So off with their heads and into the pot, now that I had a fresh supply of mordanted yarn.
No, not the dandelions this time round, although I do seem to get good colour from the leaves. But let’s face it, there will always be dandelions.
Just the one skein and an unweighed amount of marigold blossoms. 2:1 or 3:1 perhaps? Didn’t do much, so I went and picked a couple more handfuls. Well, those pastels I was talking about last week? Here ya go. Nothing you can’t get from a dozen other plants, so my previous advice stands. In fact the hank is wet in this photo for the sake of getting on with my day, so I assume it will be even paler by afternoon.
If you print, eco dye with the flower heads they work well, maybe you just need a very high concentration of heads to water which probably doesn’t make it worth while for yarn.
Dead buddhlia heads produce wonderful yellows.
Thanks for adding your contribution! 🙂
Beautiful pale yellow.
🙂
Det var ikke meget farve. Så er morgenfrueblomsterne bedre anvendt i salvekrukken.
Nej, det var ikke meget man fik for den 25-øre.
The flowers are so vivid! Yellow of wool is lovely. Jane
Try a high plant wool ratio and iron with calendula for a pretty olive green.