Thursday, 25 April 2013

Colours by Accident



This fibre is two different dye lots.   All came about by accident.  I dyed the dark colour first,  I am not sure if I miss weighed something but at the end the dye bath had not cleared and so I took a chance and added a second lot of fibre and got the pale foamy effect.   Really nice on the felted soap as they are lovely bathroom type colours.   I find that it is often difficult to get a pale colour by using less dye as often it is taken up very unevenly or just looks rather wishy- washy,  but this is a lovely colour

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Fleece to Yarn Workshop May 18th and 19th 2013


I am running another workshop in May.    Again starting with raw fleece,  covering washing, drying and preparing for spinning.   Spinning using a drop spindle and an introduction to the  spinning wheel.
Dyeing using natural and synthetic dyes and food colouring as in the photos above.  The first one taken as the locks came out of the microwave and the second the same locks dried.     Food colouring is more user friendly in the average kitchen and so I am including using it in this workshop as they can be used without any special equipment
For more information about the workshop see www.markreecastle.ie  

Friday, 12 April 2013

Felted Soap


My latest project is Felted Soap.  It is soap that is covered with wool that has been felted and you end up with a wash cloth covering the soap which conserves the soap.  The wool will shrink as you use the soap.
I have used wool from sheep that are kept here at Markree,    I prepared the fleece and hand dyed the wool before carding it        With all that care the odd hay seed or bit of moss still seems to have crept in

For this I got some lovely organic May chang hand made Irish soap from Deirdre Marie O'Sullivan,  which she sells on Etsy   https://www.etsy.com/shop/DeirdreMPhotography  

Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Too Many Lambs



Lambs appearing at a great rate but some ewes have have more than they are able to feed and need a little help.   Mother checking I am doing the job correctly and reminding me they are her lambs.   I find it much easier if the lambs stay with their Mums and I just top them up.  They will go out with the rest of the flock and I will call them at feed times and gradually they take less and less milk until they need no more feeding.

  All fed and happy about to settle down with friends for a little after dinner nap in the sun.
Busy times with sheep,  day and night,  and very little time left to spin