Starting with Natural Dyeing: How to find Easy and Foolproof Dyeplants in the wild?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 94

  • @MijnWolden
    @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +40

    Before you think I have some kind of superiority complex: I just like how saying Daucus Carota feels 😅

  • @mylena3086
    @mylena3086 29 дней назад +1

    Ahh, watching these beautifil specimen in december makes me happy
    I'm already excited for winter solstice and spring 😊

  • @miriamjames4140
    @miriamjames4140 4 месяца назад +16

    I got a drop spindle and started spinning this week because of your videos and I’m having so much fun!

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Oooh happy spinning! :D

  • @lajsa8160
    @lajsa8160 4 месяца назад +15

    I used to dye with plants, but I am to ill to source and dye with them now. I am mostly stuck in bed and very rarely get to go out in my wheelchair. So this walk felt incredible. Thank you for taking me (us) for a walk, it felt more amazing than I can describe. 😊

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +2

      I'll take you along on more walks in the future then ;)

    • @lajsa8160
      @lajsa8160 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@MijnWolden The happy noises I made reading this cannot be put into words.😁 PS I spun for 5-10 minutes today on my spinning wheel before I had to stop due to pain, but I am so happy!!! It was sooo long ago. I know it's maybe silly to be happy for such a short time, but baby steps, and I have learnt not to compare to others. I dont know why turning fluff into yarn makes my brain and hands happy but it doessssss! 🤩

  • @elinramgren7612
    @elinramgren7612 4 месяца назад +9

    Ooh I have alot of oak. Didnt know they give purple. Thanks for info and inspo🤓

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +2

      The bark should, and I had it with saplings too :)

  • @Suzco123
    @Suzco123 4 месяца назад +7

    Ohhhh another rabbit hole to go diving down! 😃 My husband is quaking as we speak 😂

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Never enough rabbitholes!

  • @carreaureyna6209
    @carreaureyna6209 4 месяца назад +9

    Just wanted to say I love your energy and adore your videos❤ i have been binge watching your videos and a spindle is on it's way. You are very inspiring and a mood lifter☺️

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Ooooh! Happy spinning :D

  • @DeniseODaniels
    @DeniseODaniels 4 месяца назад +3

    i use to belong to the knitting/weaving guild here in town...one lady had lots of cards with holes in them and on a key chain. on each card was the bit of wool she dyed and with what wild plant she use to dye her wools with. it was a very interesting key chain filled with tons of information. i loved it so. i do love the navajo dye charts. they are quite interesting. thank u Jente. beautiful video.

  • @annasullivan2564
    @annasullivan2564 4 месяца назад +1

    I have a number of black walnut trees that have just recently started dropping their fruits in our driveway. There's so many that I should be able to freeze a lot of them and dye multiple times through the rest of the year. I'm excited to do my first natural dyeing on my own hand spun yarn!

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      And walnut gives such lovely warm colours!

  • @brandyolin5979
    @brandyolin5979 4 месяца назад +2

    You have such a similar climate. Here in the Pacific North West (of the US) I have all the flowers you do, including some I see in the background that you didn't mention. I just harvested a ton of dock and tansy and got beautiful yellow floof!

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Some flowers were brought over from Europe, like dandelions, because the european immigrants thought they were such useful plants, wondering if tansy might be a same story...

    • @brandyolin5979
      @brandyolin5979 4 месяца назад

      @@MijnWolden definitely. I'm sure they escaped from gardens. There was also an American Acclimation Society in 1871 that brought and released many European plant and animal species to the US, including, sadly, starlings. I highly doubt that they were the only ones 'helping beautify' the country with their efforts, but it does mean I can now aggressively forage plenty of invasive species of plant guilt free!

  • @emilyt6803
    @emilyt6803 4 месяца назад +2

    Yay, more chaos! I’m just here to echo the other comments saying your energy is inspiring. I also started spinning because of your videos, something about the way you harness the chaos and use it to your advantage to make beautiful things made me want to do the same.
    All that to say thank you for sharing your love of spinning, local wool, and natural dyeing- back to binging your other videos!

  • @jenibylsma9845
    @jenibylsma9845 4 месяца назад +1

    Fascinating stuff! There are a lot of dye plants here in the tropics where I live. The indigenous peoples have been using them for centuries to produce vibrant colours. They use ash from their campfires as a mordant, and they produce lovely rich browns, ochres, reds and pinks … 😊

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Wood ash lye can also be used as an afterbath to produce even more different colours

  • @craftlete
    @craftlete 4 месяца назад +1

    I want to put even more emphasis on the warning on various Heracleum species (for example giant hogweed): They are phototoxic, meaning touching them will make your skin extremely sensitive towards UVA light and therefor sunlight, resulting in inflammation, swelling, nasty blisters etc. The reaction will start in the hours following the contact but can last for up to ten days. Seriously people, stay away from them 😅
    Aside from that note, what a lovely video! Good point about focusing on local flora when trying to identify plants (or mushrooms, for that matter).
    Also loved how you kept saying Daucus carota. I'm following a D&D campaign on RUclips where a side character is called Daucus - he's a harengon 😆 Had to smile everytime you said it 😊

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      A Harengon called Daucus is peak D&D shenanigans, I love it.

  • @Mourning_Dove
    @Mourning_Dove 4 месяца назад +1

    Very informative video. I loved the walk and talk!

  • @TJtheBee
    @TJtheBee 4 месяца назад +3

    My comment inspired a video?!? Hot damn! This is remarkably helpful, and now I need to look up foraging laws in my province! I do live by a little nature path, so I will have to see if I can go there with an app and do some investigating . . . once I figure out what the foraging laws are, of course. (I imagine they're pretty lenient, as I'm in Canada, but we'll see!)

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      I was already thinking about making this video, but your comment made for the ideal intro :D

    • @infamoussphere7228
      @infamoussphere7228 4 месяца назад +1

      I live in Finland and the foraging laws here are basically the closest you can get to "go hog wild". In the Nordic countries there's something called "every person's right", which means that you can forage berries (basically as many as you can, especially if they're not rare berries - there are so many bilberries in the forest it would be impossible for one person to pick so many that other people would miss out), mushrooms and plants from the forest and gather sticks basically anywhere. I'm not sure about digging stuff up, never tried that - but a lot of the plants I've foraged are considered weeds so I'll stand there on the road verge picking nettles and fat hen and I highly doubt anyone will ever look askance at me for doing so.

  • @afoxgloveshandiwork
    @afoxgloveshandiwork 4 месяца назад

    I’ll be on the look out for galls on the oak trees around!

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Yes, especially in early spring they're easy to find

  • @mylena3086
    @mylena3086 29 дней назад

    Oh my goodness, thank you so much for that info in the galls
    I've been drawn to them and surrounded by them aswell, so I'm a very lucky person
    Especially because I've been wanting to get a mordant but am somewhat hesitant of ordering things for jjst ine purpose especially in an experimented context
    This bit of info ist just perfect for a diy girlie like me
    Thank you thousandfold for sharing this
    I loved Oaks before but now I am just fascinated by the raaange of colours possible

  • @amymurdock5905
    @amymurdock5905 4 месяца назад

    Ooo! Yes! More teacing about dying naturally, please!! More plants, processes, etc! Tyty😊

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      All coming up in due time :)

  • @elizabethstreeter2145
    @elizabethstreeter2145 4 месяца назад +1

    In Australia we don’t have all those plants around easily but we do have eucalyptus so I suppose that is the trade, off. And if the other plants are visible they are all noxious weeds so we are encouraged to pull the whole lot out,as you said different countries different laws

    • @resourcedragon
      @resourcedragon 4 месяца назад

      About 30 years ago there was a woman who ran a small business based on eucalyptus-dyed wools. The colours were gorgeous. So there are definitely some possibilities there.
      I'd caution people to be careful about picking indigenous plants, I have a feeling the law does not look kindly upon them being uprooted, even for personal use.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      It would indeed be weird to see any of those in Australia... then a European traveler wasn't careful enough

    • @infamoussphere7228
      @infamoussphere7228 4 месяца назад

      @@MijnWolden oh in our case some person or people thought it would be really cool to plant those plants either in their yards or commercially, and they escaped. My "favourites" are prickly pear (they planted it to try and establish a cochineal industry), privet, pyrecantha and cottoneaster (hedging plants), Paterson's curse (poisonous but some guy thought it looked pretty) and Italian Arum (plagued my parents' yard, we ended up just mowing over it with the lawnmower because it's impossible to kill.) I'm sure some of these plants are kept in check by either local predators or snowfall but we don't really have those in Australia so..yayyyy....
      Apparently there's nettles in Australia but I never saw any. Might depend on where you are - I'm from Canberra and it's probably too dry for nettles there. My first rude introduction to them was being in Hungary and walking into an innocuous mint-looking plant and then getting a nasty rash.

  • @resourcedragon
    @resourcedragon 4 месяца назад

    That was a really fascinating video and your enthusiasm and knowledge are both obvious.

  • @CrownedLadybug
    @CrownedLadybug Месяц назад

    Coming back to rewatch this lovely video again as our copy of Wild Colour came in just yesterday! (It's technically a christmas gift for my partner, but I wasn't going to withhold it for another month and then some when they already knew about it.) It's such a lovely book and we are both so excited to get into dyeing someday!
    Also, you weaponising dutch against your viewers cracked me up. Best I can do in dutch for now is read the ingredients on recipes and yet I'm already doing the same to my (non-dutch-speaking) family

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  Месяц назад

      Well, sometimes my viewers are weaponising English (or sometimes my lack of proper pronounciation) against me, so I think it's only fair 😂

  • @bagladysendtheferalspinner3761
    @bagladysendtheferalspinner3761 4 месяца назад +3

    Check for a list of invasive weeds for your area than check to see if any of them can be used as a dye source. Most officials will encourage you to take as much as you want of these plants they can keep these pants under control. Some plants from my area of north west Canada zone 2-3: Horsetail-Equisetum arvense, wild chamomile, woad, and dandelions.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Here it would most certainly be Japanese Knotweed (that I weirdly enough didn't encounter much on this little hike, eventhough it is everywhere)

  • @mylena3086
    @mylena3086 29 дней назад

    Yes, another special interest of mine that combines so many beautiful layers of knowledge
    Lets get ittt 😁
    I'm very glad you share a little beginners guide bc in the groups I've joined people have so much info on such high levels it's a tiny bit intimidating 😅

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  27 дней назад

      I feel like some people get too detaillistic and chemical with it, while it is just fun to experiment (if you do it safely)

  • @caylarivera2804
    @caylarivera2804 4 месяца назад

    I will have my own garden soon once my partner and i move, and i am so very exited to try foraging and doing some natural dying, and maybe growing some dye plants as well ❤

  • @Tinas_Workshop
    @Tinas_Workshop 4 месяца назад

    Love, Love, Love doing natural dye and experiment with the things in my yard all the time. I had not tried Queenannsalace yet but putting that one on my to do list. I hopped on Amazon and ordered that book before your video was over, always looking for more good dye books.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Yes, more experimenting!

  • @alekfelis
    @alekfelis 4 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for your videos! I tried my grandma's method (which is in a pot), but it looks like I forgot something important, because it didn't work. Then I tried your solar dyeing method and the colour is beautiful, rich and consistent. Thank you, thank you, thank you so much! 💖

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Sometimes it needs more time in a pot than you would expect it

  • @etienne6916
    @etienne6916 4 месяца назад +1

    ohhhhhh for some reasons I kept thinking the acorns color were for oak galls xD I havent read that page right ..... currently eyeing all the oaks in my neighbrhood :D

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      It's not that they differ all that much ;)

  • @VultureSkins
    @VultureSkins Месяц назад

    6:00 AtomicShrimp has a video called “How to get started foraging - practical guidance for absolute beginners” that is a good companion to this video! He talks about cow parsley, yarrow, etc. in it, just like you do here! His channel also has some similar vibes to this one 💛
    Edit: 5:37 he has another one that was a follow-up to the first video I mentioned: “Can plant identification apps be used for foraging?” That one is worth a watch, too! He reaches the same conclusion you do (don’t rely on apps to tell you if something is safe to eat- you’ll probably get poisoned), but of course elaborates more bc it’s the subject of the video 😅
    You did a good job covering the key points for beginner foragers! :)

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  Месяц назад

      AtomicShrimp is one of my all time favourite RUclipsrs, I know exactly which videos you're referring to 😁 I aspire to be a bit like shrimp

  • @lorraineash5123
    @lorraineash5123 4 месяца назад

    Came in just at the perfect time, recently been experimenting with mint,nettles and ivy. Mainly coming out various shades of yellow! Elderberries next!🤞

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Elderberries could produce blue! Have fun experimenting

  • @christinazook593
    @christinazook593 4 месяца назад

    I am going to try this eventually, thanks to your video. Very interesting! I didn't know that oak trees are good for dyeing. I have some natural mini skeins that I want to dye. Maybe next summer.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Good luck and have fun when you try 😁

  • @Dollcan
    @Dollcan 4 месяца назад

    Loved all this information!

  • @infamoussphere7228
    @infamoussphere7228 4 месяца назад

    I'm Australian, and I find that for whatever reason we really lag behind in foraging information, especially when it comes to edible foraging. I'm sure this is a combination of factors, not least of which has to do with the fact that settler Australians ignored or dismissed Indigenous knowledge for *years*. As a result I don't really know what plants you can eat safely in Australia - even European plants like blackberries (because they are weeds and have inevitably been sprayed with pesticide.) There's a little tiny bit more accessible information on natural dyestuffs from Australian plants, but it's still pretty thin on the ground compared to European and American sources. I did dye successfully with Eucalyptus Cinerea - which funnily enough is often used in decorative flower arrangements at least in Finland, where I now live. It's a substantive dye and makes a beautiful burnt orange.
    I'm sure New Zealand has the same issue - I guess in Oceania most people are stuck with "fuck around and find out" because there just aren't the books or information available like there is for the other hemisphere.
    Anyway now I live in Finland and there's a lot more stuff I can edibly forage and also stuff I can dye with, but there's a potential other issue when it comes to accessing local knowledge. I'm pretty bad at Finnish! I don't know nothing but some very locally specific info is only available in Finnish, and if you look for foraging/dyeing info in English, it's probably most likely to come from Britain, which is further south and has a slightly different biome. I have a natural dye booklet from the mid-20th century in Finnish and there's a lot of stuff in there I could probably just awkwardly google translate/ask my wife about/muddle my way through - but another concern with older dyeing books is they can recommend that you use highly poisonous mordants. Probably best to stick to alum and iron if you're using an older dyeing guide.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Europeans colonizing other continents tends to result in a lot of knowledge being lost unfortunately 😅

  • @kellyrosloniec300
    @kellyrosloniec300 4 месяца назад

    We call wild carrot Queen Annes Lace. This is my favorite wild flower.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      It is very pretty, especially when it's just seas of the white umbels

  • @tattercandy
    @tattercandy 4 месяца назад

    thank you for the info

  • @Wannebebitch
    @Wannebebitch 4 месяца назад

    Did you know that according to the Victorians, the Tansy had the meaning of "hostile thoughts" and can be seen as a declaration of war. ;)
    I found it so interesting, that such a small flower gives such a big message.
    Thank you for this video, it was a delight to see, listen en learn from.

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Ooooh this is a bit of information that tickles my brain

  • @etienne6916
    @etienne6916 4 месяца назад

    not a dye plant as far as I know but I think the tall plant with white cones of little flowers at 6:46 is "melilot blanc" (melilotus albus) wich you can make vanilla essence from :) (please identify it properly if you want to attempt this I dont want to poison you xD

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Another plant rabbithole to dive into.... WEEEEEEE!

  • @2020Dumpsterfire
    @2020Dumpsterfire 4 месяца назад

    European oak trees are so chill, california oak trees have stabby leaves lol. It would be interesting to see if there's color differences across oaks

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      Yes that's how we differentiate between European and american oak (both grow here), the american leaves are sharp and the european leaves are round 😁

  • @saraht855
    @saraht855 3 месяца назад

    you had me looking at the trees on my walk today. Found an oak really nearby and even found my first oak gall! Went to a class on natural dyeing but still very nervous for some reason to try it by myself :( Getting closer to it though!

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  3 месяца назад

      Yay for oak galls :D If you're nervous, maybe solar dyeing might be an easier way to try and take your nervousness away?

    • @saraht855
      @saraht855 3 месяца назад

      @@MijnWolden thankyou :) I actually went for it yesterday and it worked but still not sure i like the results? I filmed it so when it's edited it will be on my channel

  • @RicaKramer
    @RicaKramer 4 месяца назад

    That's such a cool video. Do you maybe want to come to visit Dharamshala and do a video about the local plants here? It's quite different and less resources. But I am learning about it slowly. We for sure can buy walnuts from kashmir here. And i should research apricots. Have a great day

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      If ever I travel there, I'll let you know, but for now my husband and I keep on being drawn to France

    • @RicaKramer
      @RicaKramer 4 месяца назад

      @@MijnWolden yeah you have way more castles and medieval vibes there

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      @@RicaKramer exactly 😂

  • @raevynwoods9403
    @raevynwoods9403 4 месяца назад

    Well, I guess it's time to find that giant bag of walnuts I got from a friend and save the peels!

  • @mylena3086
    @mylena3086 29 дней назад

    As a forager I'm just asking
    What's with the mordant, how does it work and can someone explain it thoroughly but briefly with practical beginner friendly tips and tricks 😄

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  27 дней назад

      The mordant is what bites down on the fibers, so that they will take up the dye. This is oftentimes a metallic and/or acidic component (you can mordant with alum, copper, tin...). But galls work too, or anything that has tannins in it.

  • @leslieambailey
    @leslieambailey 4 месяца назад

    Every time I bring up natural dying at my fiberarts guild, someone always nay says it because of lightfastness. I know that you had to re-dye a sweater that you dyed with yellow onion skins. Is there any way to make these yarns more color-fast?

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      Nay sayers have all of history pre 1850 against them, just saying... ;)

    • @infamoussphere7228
      @infamoussphere7228 4 месяца назад +1

      the only one I'd really caution you against is turmeric, it has truly rubbish light-fastness. I think everything else is pretty alright.

  • @moonbasket
    @moonbasket 4 месяца назад +2

    100% PEEN

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад +1

      I was waiting for someone to notice :D

  • @buzzy.bee.crafts
    @buzzy.bee.crafts 4 месяца назад

    Such a fun idea! I’d love another video like this. Never too much chaos for me

    • @MijnWolden
      @MijnWolden  4 месяца назад

      It might be interesting to do this in another season...