Sunday 25 September 2016

New Website!

Hi everyone - I am excited to announce that I have launched the Passioned Flower website.

All things Passioned Flower including the shop and blog can now be found at www.passionedflower.com.

Thursday 10 March 2016

What does making mean to me?


A Playful Day is exploring The Maker's Year with this very simple approach - "My creativity might not look like your creativity and that's ok". Exploring seasonality and giving yourself permission to take time for all creative outlets. 
Part of developing this thought is a blog challenge, asking others to explore what making means to them.

I am passionate about having my time and space for creativity, so to think more deeply about what making actually means is an interesting step in this process.


So what does making mean to me?
Making is my outlet. My channeling of positive energy. A safe place to express myself and find ways to fuel my soul.
To me, it is using my hands and mind to create something new, or to change or improve something that already exists.
It can be as simple as weeding a path, and planting out a garden bed. Or as complex as cooking pickles and jams, preparing a handmade card or creating a new colour way of yarn.
The joy comes from the creation and achievement, the outcome and the beauty. The feeling of pride and that moment of stepping back and admiring the work.
Joy also comes from the process itself. A mindfulness. The way that the making of things switches thoughts in the brain from the external to the internal and provides the space to just be and do. To get caught up in the physical task as a form of expression and meditation.



My only frustrations come from the distractions that often get in the way. If only I could allocate more time, I would be able to achieve so much more. But, with full time work and commuting to the city along with the wide range of making that I want to plunge myself into, the energy levels and dedicated time are not always as high as I would like.

In the past year I have broadened my focus. I have gone from a knitter, paper-crafter, gardener, cook and experimental dyer and added selling my yarns on etsy, being more active on Social Media and establishing this blog.

I hope there is plenty more to come. I want to:
  • continue to grow the yarn dyeing side of things as I am truly passionate about it. There is creativity not only in the dyeing itself but in the other components like Facebook posts, Instagram photo's and product packaging.
  • get into the garden more. I have neglected my vegetable patch lately. I want to get my hands in the dirt, smell the soil and pick fresh veggies.
  • create some knitting designs (even if they are just for my own use). I have plenty of ideas, but I have just never given myself the space to work on them.
  • grow my blog and work on a full website - incorporating all aspects of my crafting life.
I am sure there are plenty of other avenues for my creativity and I hope that I can continue to learn and grow. The exciting thing with making is the infinite possibilities for self expression. 

Tuesday 1 March 2016

Milk Fibre and Bamboo

I am wanting to introduce different yarn blends in to my shop. To do this I need to firstly source different blends. I am aiming to use primarily Australian and New Zealand milled and grown yarns. To do this I have been researching the limited number of mills in Australia and finding out what un-dyed products they have in their range. Next step is to order small quantities of potential bases, dye them and knit with them to find out if I like them enough to be comfortable selling them as part of my range.

This past week I purchased three new to me blends, two are bamboo & wool blends (with different percentages of each) and the other is a milk fibre and wool blend.

First a little about these different fibres:

Milk Fibre
As the name suggests milk fibre comes from milk. It is created as a by-product of processing skim milk. A chemical process is used to extract, dry and then turn a powdered protein in to a fiber. It was first used during the 1930s and 40s to make wool and cotton go further. It is said to have anti-bacterial qualities and take colour very well (the protein in milk fibre was also known to be used in early outdoor paint).



Bamboo
Yes, the grass that Panda's eat! The insides of the stems are processed down and made into a fibre, it has a shiny finish similar to silk. It gives strength when combined with wool, while keeping a drape and breath ability.


My Experiment
In order to test out the new blends I put all three in to the same dye bath (labelled with brightly coloured yarn that would not change colour) and did two different dyeing methods.

Batch 1
First batch I dyed up in Strawberry Shortcake (a repeatable colour that I already have in the shop). This was so that I could compare how the colour takes between my current sock yarn (Gumboot Sock) and the three new bases. Look how differently it comes out across the yarns!

LtoR: Gumboot Sock, 16% milk fibre/85% wool, 50% bamboo/50% wool, 60% bamboo /40% wool
Batch 2
Next I chose to have a play. I tried some shallow immersion dyeing and squirted some dye onto different sections of the yarn, to see how the dyes would absorb and blend on each fibre. Again, some extremely varied results.

LtoR: 16% milk fibre/85% wool, 50% bamboo/50% wool, 60% bamboo/40% wool

The milk fibre yarn took up the dye a lot more than the bamboo, it is quite vibrant and dark. Of the other two, the one with the lower bamboo content seemed to take the colour better, but the one with more bamboo is a lot shinier and has more drape (this could also be due to the spinning method of the yarn as well, the 50/50 blend is a crepe style yarn, which is a bit more dense). The sheen and drape of the bamboo yarn is really lovely. I am looking forward to knitting with each of these blends to see how they work up.

Will any of these blends end up in the shop? Will have to wait and see how I like the finished projects.

Anyone who as worked with these fibres before I would be interested to get your feedback and thoughts.