| 1. |
Decide how long of a strip
you want to hook. I prefer 18” (1/2 yard) but will occasionally dye 12” for
smaller projects. |
| 2. |
Measure
18” along the selvedge of your wool, snip and rip. Never cut wool. Ripping
keeps your edges on the straight of grain. No human with scissors can do as
well. The straight of grain is important for the strength and durability of
your strips. |
| 3. |
Snip close to the selvedges
and tear them off. If the exact amount of wool isn’t important to your
formula, dye the selvedges also. Save these. They are great for testing
dye baths (if undyed), tying up bundles of wool, etc. Selvedges are often
used in prodding projects also. |
| 4. |
Fold the wool in half; snip
at the fold and rip. |
| 5. |
Fold each section in half,
in half again and in half once more. Your folds will be parallel to the
selvedge. Your finished bundle is approximately 3 ½” wide and 18” long.
 |
| 6. |
Snip at each of the folds,
two on one side and one thick one on the other.
 |
| 7. |
This will give you a
section of 8 swatches, the equivalent of ¼ yard if you originally measured
18” long. |
| 8. |
Rip each ¼ yard piece into
sections of the desired size. For sky and grass I use a piece 4 swatches
wide (a swatch set). If you need more to cover the space you are going to
hook, use more swatch sets. For spot dyes and backgrounds I use the full ¼
yard piece.
|
| 9. |
Soak to wet the wool and
dye as desired. |