Saturday, October 11, 2008

Kool Aid is Cool Again

My mother always had Kool-Aid in the house when I was growing up. She couldn't afford to have us drink juice every time we got thirsty, but Kool Aid was cheap. The first money I ever earned was probably from a Kool Aid stand and Kool Aid was what I used to bribe the neighbor kids into mowing the lawn, which was supposed to be my chore. But, I don't want my own children to have that much sugar and artificial color, so I hadn't bought Kool Aid for years, until I discovered Kool Aid as a dye. Kool Aid, it turns out, is a fruity smelling, child safe dye for any fiber that comes from animals. This means wool, mohair, silk, and human hair ( although not over dark colored hair).

Just before Christmas last year, I got the greatest deal I could ever imagine at a thrift store. An entire bolt of cream colored silk for $4.25!

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So, starting right after Christmas, my obsession became Kool Aid. I checked all of our local stores for exciting flavors, but found that only one store had a good selection. If you are in Florida, the best Kool Aid selection is at Sweetbay.
Here is what I collected:

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The first step in this process is to soak the silk in warm water with a splash of vinegar added. I cut off 1 yard of fabric for each of these projects.

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Next, mix unsweetened Kool Aid powder with hot water (ratio:1/2 cup of water to each pack of Kool Aid)
I had read that for dying wool yarn that the ratio of wool to Kool Aid was 1 ounce of wool to 1 pack of Kool Aid, so I weighed my silk piece before trying this. My silk was 27 inches by 36 inched and weighed 1.7 ounces, but I found that it took 2 packs per ounce to get a good color.
I used old peanut butter jars to mix the colors, because I could shake them, but I think something bigger should be used for the actual dying, because the fabric being squished into the jars made the colors come out uneven.

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After the cloth has soaked up most of the color from the Kool Aid water, the silk will need to be streamed for about 20 minutes to set the color. I did this right in the peanut butter jars by setting them in a large pot with some water in the bottom.

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The blue turned out very uneven, so I gave it a second dye bath in green and I really like the effect. It looks very intentional. I used a mixing bowl to mix the green and dye the cloth and the bigger bowl did help.

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Rinse the fabric in clean cool water until the water comes out clear. Then hang the fabric up to dry, but don't let two different colors touch, like I did, because the brighter color will bleed onto the other a little.

Once you iron the cloth and finish off any fraying edges, you have beautiful fabric to sew with or as playsilks for children. Blaze claimed the red one before I even had the hem sewn.
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ooooh, scary pirate!

I also tried a piece of tie dyed silk.
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Rubber bands borrowed from Blaze's GeoBoard
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