Posts Tagged ‘pickled beets’
beet pink
Last week, I tried dyeing some wool roving with the juice of pickled beets …
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Yesterday I opened the jar and rinsed the wool in cool water. Looks like a lot of the colour still went down the drain …
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And the final result? A pretty pink. Reminds me of the pink batts of insulation we installed in our walls! The wool is not scratchy at all, but soft and fragrant.
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Gradually I am building a rainbow of colour on my drying rack …
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from right to left: wool roving prepared with alum as a mordant; wool dyed with Tansy; wool dyed with Old Man’s Beard lichen; and wool dyed with pickled beet juice
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I am still working on the poem to capture this experience … it’s not quite ready to share.
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Copyright 2014 Jane Tims
beet red
For my next dyeing project, I want to use beets as dyestuff. Although my writing project is called ‘harvesting colour’, there no beets in my garden and none in the store where I shop. So I have decided to see what commercially available pickled beets will contribute to my experience of dyeing.
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My eagerness to use beets for dyeing is due to the encouragement of a friend of mine. When I asked her to do an evaluation of my project for artsnb she wrote about how she loves the colour of the water after she cooks beets. She also said how much fun it would be to keep the ‘ruby red water’ on the windowsill in a jar. I hope to be able to capture an experience like this in my poetry.
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First, I bought a jar of pickled beets. I read the label carefully, just to make sure there is no artificial colour added to the jar.
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Eating the beets is a side-benefit of this project. The taste reminds me of my Mom’s pickled beets. I remember her showing me how to boil the beets and how easy it was to slip the skins from the boiled roots.
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The beet juice is a bright rosy-red, clear and jewel-like …
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For this project, I used a length of my alum-treated wool … I have learned these mechanically-carded lengths of wool are called ‘roving’ …
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I had a scary moment when I realised adding the wool to the juice was not the best idea – danger of overflow!!! Fortunately, the wool absorbed the juice and I had to top it up with water.
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Now, again, I have to wait to see the results. I expect the beet juice to turn the wool red or even pink. But who knows what colour will emerge? I will show you the results in about one week’s time.
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I spent a while today working on drafts of a poem to accompany my beet-dyed wool. First, I thought about my friend’s comment about how wasteful it seems to pour the beautiful beet colour down the drain. Then, I focused on identifying a real-life experience to fit the metaphor.
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Since I have been working on my family history lately, I know about lost and wasted memories … I wish so much I had paid better attention when my Mom told me stories about her family. Sometimes I can remember a snippet, or a name, but the story never seems complete. Because I didn’t listen carefully to her stories, I wasted her words the way the colour is wasted as it pours down the drain.
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Once I think about what I want to express in the poem, I explore the ideas in a rapid-write. With this first step, I often find the poem begins to take form. I hand-write several drafts (usually six or seven), refining the poem’s structure and ideas. After the third or fourth draft, I begin to vary my word choices and ‘press’ on certain words to make them work harder in the poem. At some point, the form and words of the poem have become clear to me and at that time, I type the draft into the computer. Once the keyboard takes over from the pen, I concentrate on line length and punctuation.
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If this all sounds very mechanical, I will say that I believe the poem found its life in my head, before it ever reached the pen and paper stage.
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It will be while before I finish the poem and feel like it is ready to publish. Like the chemistry occurring in the mason jar of beet juice and wool, my poem will take time and patience.
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Copyright 2014 Jane Tims