Homegrown Color

The second best thing to growing our own fiber — is growing our own color.

Growing color, you ask? That means we grow our own natural dyes!

For millennia our ancestors have been using natural elements to bring color to food, textiles, the body, you name it. From roots to trees, and in flora & fauna, naturally occurring pigments are a part of the fabric of this planet!

Discovering the natural dyeing process back in 2014, I’ve been inspired and captivated ever since. And when I learned that I could grow several dye-bearing plants right here on the farm … ? Well, that simply took my personal and professional life into a whole new dimension.

Suffice it to say, I’m a fan - and hopefully you’ll be, too!

barns

My darling little dye house (left) was once a milking parlor when this farm was a dairy in the 1930’s & 40’s. Every skein of yarn and each piece of the knitwear collection was dyed by me in this space.

Just outside the dye house was the perfect little scrap of unused space. It’s about 35 feet long by 15 feet wide and has the ideal sun exposure to be home to the dye garden!

bush

Every spring, I take heaping shovels full of the alpaca’s manure and incorporate it into the beds, before sprinkling little seeds everywhere.

Or as in the case of these bright orange cosmos, they self seed and sprout all on their own!

orange flowers

If our yarn is back from the mill when the garden is in bloom (May through September), I get to use the flowers for dye when they’re freshly picked.

I like to pick them in the early morning when it’s cool and enjoyable — and before the pollinators wake up.

It’s a lovely morning ritual, especially with a hot cup of coffee.

orange liquid

Cosmos grow effortlessly, with multiple buds per stem. The more you pick, the more they bloom!

Using a low, slow heat, cosmos steeped in water make the clearest, cheeriest orange of all time. Even non-orange lovers agree.

Coreopsis is another dye garden favorite & a dainty flower that many folks recognize since it grows wild across most of the US.

She’s perennial and also self seeds incredibly well. I’m able to get the most insane shades of coppery-burgundy from her.

With both cosmos and coreopsis, I use them fresh when I can and freeze them when I can’t!

Marigold is probably my all-time favorite dye plant because it is such a versatile workhorse! Not only is it great for attracting beneficial insects while repelling pests, the classic bronzed yellow it produces is unmatched.

flowering bush

Not to mention, a little goes a long way and when it cranks out palm-sized blooms, I don’t have to grow but one or two plants! And since there’s always a bit of color leftover in the kettle after a marigold dye session, I like to bottle it to spray on the alpacas as a natural fly & insect repellant.

orange blossoms

Due their bulkiness and the fact they preserve well when dried, I spread them out on the fiber skirting table to dry. I harvest them all summer long, clear up until it frosts. I’ll usually fill the table at least twice before bagging them up.

Marigold are very fragrant, too! So laying them out like this is akin to enjoying fresh potpourri.

flowered initials

Steeping marigold is an instant mood boost & pick-me--up at any time of the year, but especially in winter. There’s nothing like steamy marigold wafting through the dye house on a snowy day to instantly transport you to warm summer sunshine!

plants

Another must-grow dye plant is weld - or - dyer’s rocket. In some areas it’s an invasive weed. And no wonder, it’s tall pointy spires are encased in tens of thousands of itty bitty balled seeds.

I never have to plant this one, since I have to wait until the seed heads shatter and turn a brownish-amber color, it self seeds like mad. I find it in cracks and crevices everywhere!

And weld is a productive as it is prolific. The pigment yields everything from a soft, pale buttercream to neon yellow.

I also over-dye with weld first when I’m shooting to get a grass green…

green leaves

And I get green with the help of indigo! You know — yellow + blue = green!

Probably the most fickle of all, indigo yields sky blues and teal-turquoise when you unlock her somewhat complicated chemistry!

A few other notable varieties are —

yellow flower

Dyer’s chamomile for a pastel yellow

red hat and gloves

Madder root - who takes a minimum of 3 years to grow sufficient pigment - but wows with crimsons and corals!

sunflower

Hopi sunflower whose ripened seeds bestow purple hues and lavender tones.

So basically I take this…

dried flowers

…to make this…

rainbow yarn

and this…

rainbow knits

Pretty cool, amiright?

Natural fibers with natural colors. All grown on my farm. It doesn’t get much better than that!

If you want to get your hands on some of our ultra soft yarns and/or luxurious knitwear, join our email list. In addition to periodic updates from the farm, you’ll be the first to know when our latest Harvest Knitwear Collection is available each fall.

Due to the limited edition nature of our product (just one harvest each spring!), quantities are limited! Since it’s debut, our Harvest Knitwear Collections sell out in a matter of a few days, and subscribers get first pickin’s. So sign up, it’s free!

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