Inspiration to feed your upcycling mind!
The perfect addition to your classroom keys or lanyard! This vibrant keychain has the cutest singers and illustrates the joy of the choir room! Single Sided Full Color Image Durable Enamel Stainless Steel Key Ring 2 inches by 1.5 inches
I've done yarn dyeing tutorials in the past like my gradient slow cooker method or my ice cube solar dyeing experiment. But I often get asked how do you dye yarn with just Kool Aid? Just a simple dye? I'm doing this for a current knitting project and thought I'd document it so you can see. And I'll be doing it on my stove top. Kool Aid Yarn Dyeing 101. Also you can use this same method to dye with food coloring. I'll post the slight technique differences in blue. What you need: -Yarn. All wool to mostly wool. Rather, mostly an animal fiber (wool, silk, hair...). Now your yarn can be a blend like 80% wool, 20% nylon. It just won't dye as vibrant. But the more wool/animal fiber content it has, the better. Cotton and acrylics will not dye! Don't even try it. -Kool Aid or food coloring. Generally, you want one packet of Kool Aid per ounce of fiber. You can do more for a super bright, intense color or less for a softer, pastel shade. You want straight Kool Aid, not a mix with added sugar or sweetener (yuck! Sticky yarn!) VERY IMPORTANT: YOU DO NOT ADD SUGAR TO THIS. YOU JUST USE THE KOOL AID POWDER STRAIGHT FROM THE PACKET. With food coloring, I have no advice. You just play around until you find the right amount of dye for the shade you're looking for. You can use liquid food coloring or gel. Both work great! Make sure you're buying coloring and not colored flavored icing (with sugar). -White vinegar if dyeing with food coloring. -Gloves. Pretty much the most important thing here. Cheap rubber or latex gloves to prevent your fingers and hands being stained by Kool Aid. -Tiny amount of acrylic yarn for tying off skein. -A large bowl or sink. To soak yarn, to rinse yarn. -A large stock pot to heat dye and yarn. -A large plastic spoon to stir. -Stove top burner. A side note: Since Kool Aid and food coloring are non-toxic you can use your everyday kitchen supplies to do this. No need to buy "dye only" spoons, bowls and pots. Just wash them when you're done and they'll be fine. Step One: So where do you get this dyeable yarn from anyway? I usually buy it online from Knit Picks. You can also find natural (undyed yarn) in craft stores and local yarn shops. Cascade 220 and Patons Classic Wool are great. You don't need white/natural yarn. If you dye over a tan, grey or any light color your dye result will look more jeweled tone instead of primary bright, bright, BRIGHT! Check this out to see what I mean. Today I'm dyeing Knit Picks Bare Peruvian Highland Wool in Worsted Weight. It's 200 yards/100 grams. 100 grams is about 3.5 ounces. So I'd need 3-4 packets of Kool Aid for a true color. I'm going with 3 for this dye job. The yarn comes in a skein with two ends tied up. We want to add more two more ties on the other end. This will prevent tangling and make it much easier for us to handle after we've dyed it. I've used a small amount of red acrylic yarn and tied a loose figure 8 in the skein. You don't want it too tight or dye won't get under the ties. It doesn't matter what color, but acrylic yarn is great because the color doesn't bleed off (meaning, there won't be any red dye in my yarn.) Step Two: Fill your sink or large bowl with lukewarm water. Gently place yarn into the water and carefully press down and squeeze it. Try to get as much water into the yarn so it stops floating to the top. You're soaking the yarn so that when you dye it, the color absorbs more evenly. Now if you're dyeing with food coloring, add a glug of white vinegar to this water soak before you add the yarn. Kool Aid has citric acid in it, which helps bond the dye to the yarn. Food coloring doesn't have it so adding a bit of vinegar will do the trick. Let the yarn sit in the water for 15-30 minutes. While this is happening, move to the next step. Step Three (the fun part): Get your gloves, Kool Aid and large plastic spoon ready. For today's dye job I'm using three packets of Lemon Lime Kool Aid. Fill your large pot with water and heat it up on your stove. Dyeing with food coloring? Add another glug of white vinegar this pot of water. You want the water to be hot and steamy but without any boiling or simmering nonsense. I usually bring it up to temperature on medium heat and then take it down to low when it's nice and hot. Put on your gloves (except I forgot. HA!) and pour your Kool Aid packets into the pot of hot water. Stir it with your plastic spoon until it's all dissolved. Food coloring dyers, you can squirt, drop and scoop your dye right into the the hot water and stir until dissolved. Not sure how much to add? Start light and you can always add more color later. Now drain the water out of your yarn bath and gently squeeze the excess water out of your yarn. It doesn't have to be mostly dry, just get enough water out that it's not slopping around. Gently place the yarn into your pot of dye water. Use the plastic spoon to push the yarn down getting it completely submerged. Swirl it around, turn it over, loosen it up. Just be gentle so you don't accidently felt it. Add more hot water if you need. There should be plenty of room for the yarn to move around and be in water entirely. When dyeing, it's not the amount of water that is a concern, but rather the amount of dye. How do you know when it's done dyeing? When it's the color you want or when it does this really cool, magical thing. All the dye that is in the water, goes into the yarn. So you'll know when it's done because the water is clear! Some Kool Aid flavors like lemonade will turn the water chalky white and not clear when it's done. But you're looking for the lack of color in the water to clue you in. Super cool right? This is why it's important to calculate the yarn to dye ratio rather than the yarn to water ratio. Here's a photo of the yarn right when I put it in the bath. Notice the water? Super green! This photo shows the yarn in the dye bath for a few minutes. Still some dye but much clearer! And this is the pot of water after I've taken my dyed yarn out. No dye! So when you're dyeing your yarn, stir it every couple of minutes to make sure it doesn't settle to the bottom (to prevent scorching) and to make sure all the fibers are getting dyed. When it's to the color that you want, or all the dye has been absorbed into the yarn (it took less than 10 minutes for this to happen), bring your large bowl over and use the spoon to carefully pull yarn out of pot and into the bowl. Let the yarn hang out in the bowl until it's room temperature. You may have gently flip or spread out the yarn occasionally to help the cooling process. Don't rush it! Be patient. We don't want to felt our yarn! A side note: If it's not a deep enough color for you but the dye water is clear, pull the yarn out and put it in the bowl. Add more Kool Aid or food coloring and stir to dissolve. Add the yarn and repeat until color is achieved. Step Four: Woohoo! Dyed yarn! Once it's nice and cooled down, pull it out of your bowl or sink and put it somewhere for a second (dish rack? towel? plate?). Also, you'll notice how helpful adding extra ties to your yarn was. See how easy it was to untangle? Fill the bowl or sink with lukewarm water and put the yarn back in it. Swish it around. You're cleaning/rinsing the yarn. If any color comes off into this new water then STOP! Grab the yarn and put it back into the hot water in the pot and cook for a few minutes more- add another glug of white vinegar if using food coloring. If your water is clear, drain and squeeze the water out of yarn as best you can and hang to dry (nevermind my hula hoops). Here's my dyed yarn in it's rinsing bath. Water is clear! No run-off dye. When it's completely dry, wind it into a ball and start knitting! Viola!! You did it! Now wasn't that easy?? Have you sniffed your yarn yet? Smells like candy! Experiment with mixing colors. Dye one half of the skein one color, then dye the other half a second color. Look around. Be inspired by colors in your life! Dye and knit ALL THE THINGS! The Kool Aid dye is permanent. It won't wash off. Treat it like you would any other wool. Let me know if you have any questions in the comments below.
Kool-Aid man's svelte new look. (Image credit: Kraft Foods) In his decades as the face of Kool-Aid, the Kool-Aid Man has been known primarily for bursting through walls to offer up his namesake beverage with an “Oh yeah!” catch phrase. On Monday, Kraft Foods gave their brand “spokespitcher” a tech-savvy new [...]
Kool-aid is so inexpensive, and there are so many fun ways to use it!
Hey guys so guess who’s making the Generation Loss mask and has made a completely free & useable template ✨ 😁#generationloss #generationlossart #ranboo #ranboocosplay
This is the example the finish one.. BUT U must make it use BLACK PAPER. It's no matter whether u write the message after or before fold ...
Kool Kraft is on a mission to provide safe and creative fun for our children and the whole Family, utilizing different unique art projects. You can trust Kool Krafts to keep your child occupied for hours while creating adorable and original projects.\n\nEVERYTHING YOU NEED TO CREATE ADORABLE ORIGAMI PROJECTS\n\nPACKAGE INCLUDES:\n\n300 Sheets of high-quality colored squares - 6 x 6 inch.\n50 Beautiful Japanese pattern sheets\n25 easy to follow large Colored Book instruction
Sorry I haven't posted in awhile. I've been busy getting ready for my last day, which was today. It was hard to say goodbye to the kids and ...
OK – this is a quick and easy project that will use us all those scraps of fabric, bits and pieces of wool, buttons and I even included some pieces of an old shrunken knit…you can use a…
I have a confession. I didn't go fishing this past week. (Gone Fishin' ) I went for my annual "spring retreat" in the Ozark Mountains. But, I Was at a lake, and I Did eat some fish! While there, I began another rag rug, inspired by the blues in the sky, the greens of the trees, and the whites of the Dogwood in bloom. I think you can see my inspiration-- the view from my deck. It all began when I visited a thrift store. They were having a Bag Sale-- all you could get in a brown paper bag for $5.00. I spotted the turquoise curtains first, and then added shirts and skirts in the whites and blue-greens; tore all into strips, and started weaving. There's a rhythm to weaving that is so comforting. Add to that a little bit of a breeze, the fragrance of flowers blooming, songs from birds in the trees, and life, for me, was pretty close to perfect. For more rag rug inspiration: Rag Rugs: A Delta Folk Art Rag Rug Looms may be purchased at: Our Old Country Store
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A simple recipe for soft, yummy-smelling playdough
I can't believe it's December already! Here are 4 Angels from Retro Cafe Art Gallery that are going on the tree or to new homes. ...
Being proactive is the key to avoiding a meltdown in your classroom, but you’ll need to know your students motivators, behaviors and triggers first! Improving the most challenging behavior ca…
Having some fun today playing with paper and clear silicone (the stuff you caulk your tub with). I picked up the silicone on a recent trip to Target for about $3. Don't you love a store where you can buy silicone and a gallon of milk? For this project, the silicone must be clear, not white. I cut a few sheets of 12 x 12" paper (this one is from the Camden Collection) into 6" wide strips. Put your paper on a craft sheet or an old newspaper. Squeeze some silicone onto the top of the paper. Use a scraper (or an old credit card) to pull the silicone down the paper in a thin even layer until the paper is covered. Super easy. But here's the hard part...leave it alone and don't touch it for a few hours. I'm not so good at not touching to see if it's dry so I usually have to put it in the garage or leave the house and go to Target. The paper I made was dry in a couple hours but it felt even better the next day. The silicone puts a plastic type coating on the paper. I put on very thin coating so I'm not sure if it really makes the paper any more heavy duty, but it gives it a water proof covering that makes it seem like it's more substantial or durable than plain paper. Also...I only put the silicone on the patterned side of the paper. Once my paper was dry, I decided to make an envelope for a small gift. I just folded up the 6 x 12" paper and added some 7gypsies Global paper tape on the edge. I wanted to stitch it closed so it will last longer. You will need to place a craft sheet (or even a piece of paper) under the envelope so that it will slide on the sewing machine when you stitch it. As you can see by the photo I placed the craft sheet to the left of where I am sewing (don't sew through your craft sheet). Stitch both sides of the envelope to close. Round the corners of the envelope flap. Add an eyelet And a piece of ribbon And there you have it, a reusable envelope. I am giving a lot of gift cards this year so why not make an envelope in a small size. Take your 6 x 12" paper and cut it in two so you have two, 6 x 6" squares. Fold the square in half, crease it. Coloma paper Open it back up and place your gift card on the paper for size. Cut along the top of the gift card and up the crease. Fold in half again (the green stripe you see is your flap). I thought it was too long so I trimmed off a bit. Round the corners Add paper tape (Off the Wall) and stitch closed just like the last envelope. I punched out a half moon shape with a 1" circle punch so you can see the gift card when you open the flap. Add an eyelet, some red and white string and a charm and your ready to go. Don't forget the gift card. Then, just because I had more paper I decided to make a little notebook for my purse. Same 6 x 12" size paper. Same basic fold as the first envelope but I made the flap a bit longer. I cut 4 sheets of paper from a vintage ledger. Folded in half and creased. Add to the book, matching creases to stitch the signature. Punch three holes with a paper piercer or awl through both outside paper and ledger paper. Bend a piece of wire in half to make a "needle" for your string. Stitch your book together. NOTE: In the previous picture I showed the needle going into the center hole (2) from the inside. If you want the string to tie on the outside of the book you will need to start sewing from the outside to the inside leaving a 5" tail of string. The stitching pattern is 2, 1, 2, 3 then tie both strings on the outside of the book. This is how it looks on the outside. I stitched around a kraft envelope then added it to the back of the book with a tape runner. For a closure I used a simple 7gypsies Lille paper clip (big and sturdy). After I was done, I saw a scrap from the ledger paper on my desk and thought that might work good with the paperclip I choose, so I folded it over, stitched it closed and cut a dove tail on the end. I used some quick dry glue to keep it on the paper clip. I do realize that adding the flag on the paperclip made it impractical if I am really going to put this in my purse but I just liked it so much, maybe it can just be a notebook for my desk for now. Now if you came here from the Gypsy Journal today, you know there is one more thing I made. But you'll have to come back tomorrow to see how I did this one... cheers! paula
Dreams | by red.dahlia
Sugar Republic – A Very Sweet Melbourne Experience
Explore ArtisticOutpostLLC's 786 photos on Flickr!
Here are some better shots of this little collection.... Thanks for your kind comments and guesses where they are going..... Its not for L...
Wouldn't you like to know some way to recycle Christmas cards or other greeting cards? Here's one idea: Use them to craft small baskets!
12 DIY candle ideas 🤩 Make yourself a cozy space using these ideas!