November 30, 2011  Wool No Responses »
Hand-dyed wool by Wild Thymes Pattern Company

Hand-dyed wool by Wild Thymes Pattern Company

There have been some questions about hand-dyed wool lately that I am going to try to address.  The word “colorfast” should not appear in a description of hand-dyed wool, cotton or any other fiber.  Every hand-dyer will make their product as “colorfast” as they possibly can; however, they can never guarantee it.  If you look at the fine print, there will be a disclaimer (or there should be one) which explains that the dyers’ have done their very best at making their wool colorfast.

We receive bolts of commercially dyed wool all the time from our professional distributors that bleeds or runs all over the place!   Colorfastness simply can’t be guaranteed.

On the bright side, you shouldn’t be afraid of using the hand-dyed fiber products.  If you are using a red floss on a white background – you should color test the red thread.  Don’t color test it in hot water, (unless you are going to wash the finished piece in hot water) test it in lukewarm water.  If you know a finished piece is going to be laundered frequently, then give washing instructions with it and never wash hand-dyed fibers in hot water, always in lukewarm.

In regards to Wild Thymes’ wool, we can’t guarantee that it is “colorfast”.   There is also a multitude of dying products available on the market and each has it’s own formula for how the dye adheres to the fibers. The bottom line is how well the wool/fibers accept, absorb, and hold the dye.  It’s all chemistry; my water may have more minerals in it than another dyer’s water or they may have city water with chlorine in it.  All these factors play a role in providing the very best colorfast fibers that a hand-dyer can achieve.

There may be hand-dyers out there that will not agree with me on these points; however, I am leaning on the side of caution and why wouldn’t you?  Our wool designs don’t need to be laundered unless something really nasty happens to them.  We felt every piece of wool that goes into our kits or bundles and like all the other dyers out there, we provide colorfastness to the best of our ability.

To sum up my thoughts.  Don’t be afraid of using hand-dyed fabrics or thread, just treat them carefully when you need to launder them.

 
 November 16, 2011  Wool No Responses »

This is the most confusing word used in the “Wool” world.  It means two different things depending on how the word is used. I’m going to try to clear that up for you.

Webster’s definition:
felt, n. 1.  a non woven fabric of wool, fur, or hair, matted together by heat, moisture, and great pressure.  2.  a matted fabric or material that resembles felt.

So, when you hear the term wool felt, it is the process described above that has wool fibers mixed with synthetic fibers. There is usually only about 10% wool fibers and the rest is synthetic.  Felt is made like paper with ground-up fibers pressed together to make sheets.  It is a NON WOVEN product.

Felted wool is another product altogether.  It is garment-quality 100% woven wool fabric that has been washed in hot water, rinsed in cold water and dried in the dryer to shrink or tighten the weave.  In the wool appliqué world we call this felting the wool.  Another term used for this process is boiled wool.

The difference in price and quality is light-years away from each other.  One is an heirloom quality fabric and the other is a craft product.

So, the question to ask when ordering a wool kit is:
Does this kit contain 100% woven wool that has been felted or is it felt?

The price should also give a hint if it is pure woven wool that has been felted or simple craft felt.  Felted woven wool can cost up to 10 times the cost of felt but remember, projects made from felted wool are heirloom quality as opposed to a craft project.

I sincerely hope this helps to clear up the confusion of “felted wool”  a high quality woven fabric that has been washed to shrink it, which is what we use, as opposed to “wool felt” that is a non woven craft product.

Nov 162011
 
 November 16, 2011  Wisdom - My Way No Responses »

When most people talk about wool quilts, they immediately think “heavy”.  Not so, in reality, a wool batt weighs a lot less than cotton and is so nice to quilt through – like quilting through butter.  Because wool is a natural fiber,  it heats up to a comfortable warmth then starts to release the excess heat which means you are always just the right temperature.

Try to always purchase a natural fiber for your quilt batt.  There are so many to choose from including, but not limited to: wool, cotton, down, silk, linen, bamboo, or any other natural fiber.

Nov 162011
 
 November 16, 2011  Wool No Responses »

There is no way to determine how much a piece of wool will shrink when felting it.  There are too many variables like how hot the water is, how long it’s agitated, how the wool was processed before weaving, how refined is the wool, etc.  This is one reason why Wild Thymes felts all the wool in every kit or bundle we sell.  The other reason is we want our customers experience to be easy, happy, and successful.  By felting all the wool ahead of time, we eliminate the customers’ need to stress over the felting process.

So, when buying yardage off the bolt for a project, always buy more than it calls for to allow for shrinkage during the felting process.   We sell our wool either way – off the bolt (not felted) or felted.

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