Fall Wreath

As some of you may have noticed, there is a giant new laser cutter at the shop! Since my interests are less acrylic and wood and more fabric and yarn, I decided to ask Tyler to laser cut some leaves out of felt for use in a fun fall wreath.  Here is how I did it:

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I laser cut a box for our business cards because they kept falling off the lip of the white board. I also made a box for our pamphlets as they too kept falling.

The Post-Its on the the Kandan Board also kept falling off the white board. So I laser cut some boxes to keep the Post-Its from falling.

Post-It Boxes
Post-It Boxes

After laser cutting the boxes, I realized that the word’s “Shastas”, “Doing”, and “Done” on the Kanban Board would look much better if they were laser cut. I also realized that “Borrowed” would also look great if it was laser cut.

I have a great time making these upgrades to the white board!

You can check out videos of the yarn dying process here.

Credits: Jonica had the original idea, Kirstin pushed the organization, Shae was entertaining, and Jennifer documented the whole thing.

Kirstin, Shae, and Jonica excited to do some yarn dying
Jonica, Shae, and Kirstin excited to do some yarn dying

During the week after our original idea to dye yarn, Shae purchased Jacquard acid dyes and undyed yarn. Kirstin purchased a stainless steel pot for dyeing along with white vinegar and filter masks. Kirstin did all of the research on required ingredients listed above, and what types of dyes should be used on a type of fiber. We decided to use acid dyes on protein based fibers, since that meant we could work with our most familiar and accessible material, animal fiber yarn. Acid dyes can be damaging when inhaled or absorbed through the mucus membranes; fortunately, Kirstin is also a lab tech in her day job, her expertise kept us safe during the process.

We assembled Saturday March 28th with the expectation that we would make mistakes and learn. After we carefully applied our safety equipment…

…Kirstin started with red dye and a small skein of alpaca yarn. We dumped the yarn into the pot, heated the water to a simmer, turned off the heat, and applied dye. We waited 30 minutes for the dye to set, and the resulting red yarn was beautiful!

Next, Shae chose blue, Jonica mixed yellow and green, and then we mixed all four colors into a large skein.

The small skeins were dry a few hours later, but the large skein took most of the weekend to dry.

We made the expected mistakes, and learned much.

1. Get all the yarn into the water with the dye.
2. Make sure the yarn is not tightly clumped together so all the yarn is exposed to the dye. We learned this requires cutting the ties that keep the skein from tangling.
3. An addendum to the second point is, use smaller lengths of yarn.

For our next session we’re hoping to re-dye the big chunk of yarn that didn’t get fully colored, and separate
the other large skeins of yarn into smaller skeins for more experiments.

Thank you to everyone who came out and made flowers with us on February 7th. We were able to make a lot of flowers for the Wedding Week event. We had fabric, tissue paper, origami, and felt flowers. Check out the pictures below!

Kirstin, Jennifer, and Heather making flowers
Kirstin, Jennifer, and Heather making flowers
John, Heather, and Phil making flowers
John, Heather, and Phil making flowers
Kirstin and Dickie making flowers
Kirstin and Dickie making flowers
ALL THE FLOWERS!
ALL THE FLOWERS!
Fabric Flowers
Fabric Flowers
Origami Kusudama Flowers
Origami Kusudama Flowers
Calla Lilies
Calla Lilies
Anemones Flowers
Anemones Flowers
Tissue Paper Flowers
Tissue Paper Flowers
Origami Iris Flowers
Origami Iris Flowers

The hutch in its final resting place.
The hutch in its final resting place.

A while back, I discovered I needed more shelving and counter top space in my kitchen, so I decided to build what you see to the right. The hutch is made of “natural”-stained red oak sanded to 600 grit with 4-5 layers of polyurethane depending on the piece. The counter top is made of manufactured granite which is really just polished concrete. The wood structure is held together with dowels and wood glue.
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