Monday, May 29, 2006

Overdyeing - a kids' project

One of the "jobs" I have these days is being a substitute teacher. For now, I limit my subbing to the school where my own children attend. Since my oldest has gone through almost all of the grades there, I am quite familiar with all of the routines and curriculums. That helps to eliminate some of the stress a sub goes through when faced with a classroom of children eager to convince you "Mrs. X really does let us work together on math worksheets."

Last week I subbed in a 3rd grade class. This was a pre-arranged two day assignment. I love multi-day assignments because it allows me to plan ahead a fiber project for the kids. This time the kids overdyed light brown wool with food coloring. Educationally, it was a science experiment, in case the principal came in wanting to know how food coloring and wool were related to the students' instructional time. The presentation only took about 10 minutes. Putting fiber into their cup took about 20 minutes.

First, we talked about different foods that can cause stains. Putting this in the context of "has your mother ever gotten upset that you got strawberries/hot chocolate/juice/ketchup/mustard/etc... on your clothes?" we talked about natural dyes (strawberries, chocolate, mustard), fiber types (cotton, wool, synthetic) and the process of staining, aka dyeing.

Next, each student was given a strip of light brown wool roving about 12 inches in length. We used Wilton's gel cake decorating colors, which sadly I've recently learned is not light-fast but it served its purpose for this experiment. Each student picked a color. In cases where more than one student picked a color, we made an effort to make different strength solutions to get light and dark shades. Note: Ahead of time I made a list of possible colors on the board limiting the number of students per color lest we have all the boys pick blue and all the girls pick violet.

We put water, a glug of white vinegar, and some of the Wilton's gel into cups. The kids put their roving into the cup, use a spoon to submerge it (we didn't pre-wet the fiber) and place the cup in the sunny windowsill. My intention was to dye this using a modified "sun tea" method. Unfortunately, the sun wasn't cooperating. I knew by the end of the day that I had to speed up the process. I made use of the microwave in the teacher's lounge after school. Three of the cups were left un-finished on purpose so the kids could see the difference.

On the second day, I showed the kids the un-finished cups with the rovings. The fiber did have some color change but the liquid was also still colored. Then I showed them the exhausted cups. They were amazed to see the colorful fiber but even MORE amazed at the clear liquid. "Where did all the color go?", they all exclaimed! I used the two liquid examples to emphasize the need for heat as an integral part of this particular dyeing process recipe.

We also looked at some of the violet and black rovings up close. These food coloring colors tend to split - meaning they'll separate into their main colors and strike fiber unevenly resulting in splotchy dyeing. Some fiber artists call that a "feature" and rely on it for effect. I used this feature to remind them how colors are made (violet = red + blue, green = yellow + blue, black = many colors) and explained that in this case the colors didn't stay mixed once in the water and after separating, the fiber dyed with the separate colors. In our experiments, one of the violets was pink streaked with blue and one of the blacks was green.


The colors we used were:
Christmas Red
Red, Red
Leaf Green
Kelly Green
Yellow
Orange
Violet
Royal Blue
Brown
Black
The strip of light brown roving at the top just above the purple-violet and to the left of the red is a strip of the original colored roving.


Things to do differently next time:
1. Use glass jars instead of plastic cups. It lets the kids see the contents from the side instead of having to stand over the cup to look inside.
2. Pick less colors. Period. I let each student "own" a color but this meant that as I was working with the one student, the rest sat there unoccupied. This particular class is wonderful so there weren't any problems but I wouldn't count on that being the case in the future. From now on, I would work in groups (this was a class of 19 so perhaps groups of 5) and give the others a worksheet to occupy them until it was their turn.

What will become of the rovings? Check back in a few weeks because I've volunteered (i.e. no pay) to go back to the class in early June to finish up.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a lot of fun, and you sound like an exceptional sub. That school is lucky to have you.

mekanamom said...

Hiya Kimberly,

Looks like you're doing great with the alpacas! Long time no see, eh. I found your website through the 4-H newsletter.

The kids and I plan on doing quite a bit of sun-dyeing using Kool-Aid this summer. Fun!

My goal is to spin three fleeces by October... if I get back into spinning enough to do that, I'll look into crossing my Corrie/Southdown ewes with a Romney ram. Sould get some lovely wool from those lambs!

Well, we'll probably be seeing each other through 4-H... ttyl,

Shel P.

Kimberly said...

Well hello Stranger! I hadn't realized your girls were in 4-H too. So far I don't have any "takers" on the 4-H alpaca project help so I might make it into a fiber project. I need to talk to the admin person for some guidance on the project's scope. If you're interested, we're shearing on Saturday at Foothill Llama and Alpaca Ranch (see link on side of page) from 9am to 2pm. Come on down if you have time!

mekanamom said...

I think it would be wonderful for our club to have a Fiber Arts project. I had sent an email a while ago to Laurie about starting one, but after reading through your blog, I think you are *much* better qualified than I to lead this project! If you go for it, just let me know if you need any extra hands on board.

Alpaca Shearing Day on Saturday sounds fun too... My sheep fitting stand arrived just last week, so I spent all weekend shearing my sheep as well as a friend's sheep. I know absolutely nothing about alpacas and it would be fun to see the differences in fiber. If I can work it into our schedule, maybe I'll see you there!

Jennifer said...

That is so cool that you work fiber stuff into your substitute teaching ... I would've loved that when I was a kid. I've enjoyed browsing your blog ... working with the alpacas sounds so interesting.

Sandra said...

What a cool way to add value when you sub. I'll bet the teachers love it when you do something fun and the kids love it too.