Hi! I’ve tried making cochineal lake dye. I’ve managed to make purple ones, but how do i make it more redder? Should i add cream of tartar with the alum? I’ve attempted to make it redder twice and both failed because i never got the liquid to separate
Quelles beauties 🌸💛🌸 merci pour ce joli moment..ça me rappelle tellement de belles choses...thanks to dad for filming...here in Bretagne its cold again can't wait to Dye again...take good care 🌈🕊️✨
I recently found your channel and i love it soo much! I really love your style and seeing your sweet little children! I have been interested in natural dying for years but have only barely dipped my toes into it. I have been wanting to jump in though so i have loved your videos!i really really want to try my hand at making my own natural watercolors!
Hello. Thanks for being here 🥰 I’d like to make some water colours too …. Maybe we will do a video. I’d absolutely recommend some of Liz Spencer’s @thedogwooddyer online workshops if you want to get started also there’s a really beautiful book called « make ink » 💜💜💜
@@billynou Thank you! Yes I follow her but I didn’t realize that she had a book! Thank you for the recommendation. I would love to see a video from you on it!🥰❤️
Hey love… the may be a way that I’m not aware of. I don’t think soda ash is super harmful…. It’s used in lots of laundry detergents but is a high ph so you do need to be careful about it touching skin or inhaling powder ☺️
What a fluke - I've just done exactly the same with the same recipe, the same instructions from Liz, the same stainless steel bowl! I used my exchaus dye from sumac leaves as well as from a piece of alder wood. Strangely enough the sumac did not froth up, though the ph-level was a good 7. In any way, it will make a pigment I can use for water colours if not for fabric paint. What a great job you're doing with your children! Love your "hach";).
@@billynou Hello. Back again. I have made a few lake pigments now, but not used them yet. What irritates me, is that I have read/seen from other people making lake pigments (e.g. the barefoot dyer) that they must be washed after the initial filtering process and filtered once more. This is to eliminate the metal salts. I am not sure where this is necessary. I can imagine that when the pigments are mixed with alum and gum arabic to make paints for printing on fabrics, one would have to adjust the amount of alum used. But if used for painting on paper? Or does the colour maybe change after being applied? Have you used your pigments yet? Have you heard about washing?
What natural soaps or detergent would you recommend to wash natural dyed fabrics for longevity? I’m new to all of this and learning a lot from your channel, thank you :)
Anything gentle and ph neutral… a lot of dyes are ph sensitive so if you want the colours to stay the same then that’s important…. I used to wash everything by hand in cool water but these days I often fling them on a cool gentle wash in the machine and they support that way more than you’d think…. All depending on what dyes and fabric etc you used
Hi! I’ve tried making cochineal lake dye. I’ve managed to make purple ones, but how do i make it more redder? Should i add cream of tartar with the alum? I’ve attempted to make it redder twice and both failed because i never got the liquid to separate
Quelles beauties 🌸💛🌸 merci pour ce joli moment..ça me rappelle tellement de belles choses...thanks to dad for filming...here in Bretagne its cold again can't wait to Dye again...take good care 🌈🕊️✨
Great video! 💜💗 thanks! I have a question. What is that iron you used to make the purple? Thank you!
Hi Billy, does the book include how to make pake pigments? thank you
I recently found your channel and i love it soo much! I really love your style and seeing your sweet little children! I have been interested in natural dying for years but have only barely dipped my toes into it. I have been wanting to jump in though so i have loved your videos!i really really want to try my hand at making my own natural watercolors!
Hello. Thanks for being here 🥰
I’d like to make some water colours too …. Maybe we will do a video. I’d absolutely recommend some of Liz Spencer’s @thedogwooddyer online workshops if you want to get started also there’s a really beautiful book called « make ink »
💜💜💜
@@billynou Thank you! Yes I follow her but I didn’t realize that she had a book! Thank you for the recommendation. I would love to see a video from you on it!🥰❤️
Hi Billy. Hope You are good. Can we extract natural lake pigments without adding soda ash? Isn't Soda ash harmful? Thanks in advance.
Hey love… the may be a way that I’m not aware of. I don’t think soda ash is super harmful…. It’s used in lots of laundry detergents but is a high ph so you do need to be careful about it touching skin or inhaling powder ☺️
@@billynou Thank you Billy.
What a fluke - I've just done exactly the same with the same recipe, the same instructions from Liz, the same stainless steel bowl! I used my exchaus dye from sumac leaves as well as from a piece of alder wood. Strangely enough the sumac did not froth up, though the ph-level was a good 7. In any way, it will make a pigment I can use for water colours if not for fabric paint. What a great job you're doing with your children! Love your "hach";).
Awwww cool! This is so nice to hear and so happy you’re learning from Liz…. She’s incredible ! 💚💚
@@billynou Hello. Back again. I have made a few lake pigments now, but not used them yet. What irritates me, is that I have read/seen from other people making lake pigments (e.g. the barefoot dyer) that they must be washed after the initial filtering process and filtered once more. This is to eliminate the metal salts. I am not sure where this is necessary. I can imagine that when the pigments are mixed with alum and gum arabic to make paints for printing on fabrics, one would have to adjust the amount of alum used. But if used for painting on paper? Or does the colour maybe change after being applied? Have you used your pigments yet? Have you heard about washing?
Love your videos. Where did you get your beautiful earrings from?♥️
I think I got them in Thailand a looong time ago … and super annoyingly I think I’ve just lost one 😭😭
What natural soaps or detergent would you recommend to wash natural dyed fabrics for longevity? I’m new to all of this and learning a lot from your channel, thank you :)
Anything gentle and ph neutral… a lot of dyes are ph sensitive so if you want the colours to stay the same then that’s important…. I used to wash everything by hand in cool water but these days I often fling them on a cool gentle wash in the machine and they support that way more than you’d think…. All depending on what dyes and fabric etc you used
@@billynou awesome thank you ☺️