Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Soda Ash - The Basics

  • Pool supply shops are a great place to buy. They call it 'pH Up'. 
  • It irritates my skin - taken care of by using protective gloves 
  • When dissolving, if you get it wet too slowly, it will form a brick that takes a l-oo-ng (long) time to dissolve. Just be sure to be swishing it a bit while adding water. 
  • While I've figured much of what works for me in this messy business of fabric dyeing, how much soda ash to add is still a mystery. Some say you have to get the bath up to a pH over 10. BUT since I'm certain of this, take this with a grain of salt. (Not literally)
  • Some techniques rely on pre-soaking in soda ash water. 
  • Others do better adding the soda ash as a final process step. 
  • How to know? IF swishing all the fabric together in the dye bath would ruin the outcome, then you do a pre-soak. IF you want the smoothest color possible - then do NOT pre-soak. 
  • IF you want mottled BUT with kinda smooth transitions, then do soda ash after. 
  • For a pre-soak, probably 30 minutes is good (if it's thick fabric, then longer is maybe safer). 
For AFTER, it's much more complicated.
  • First, don't add the soda ash water directly over the fabric in your dye vat. AND, add it gradually. 
  • One way: push the fabric to the side and add 1/4 of the soda ash water, swish into the dye bath, then swoosh the fabric through the dye bath thoroughly. Repeat 2 or 3 times. Swish really well for at least 20 minutes. 
  • Then, it soaks for a while. I found 2 hours is better than 1 hour and maybe long enough. BUT, it's OK to go much longer if your life requests this -- overnight is OK. 
Preparing the soda ash water OR how much to use
  • I don't have notes on how much soda ash to use. Sorry. 
  • Some say to use 1 teaspoon of soda ash for every cup of water in the dye bath. SO, if you'll have 1 gallon water in the FINAL dye bath (including what is used to add the soda ash), this is 16 cups. You'd dissolve the 16 teaspoons in a cup or two of very warm water ahead of time. 
  • 16 teaspoons is bit more than 5 Tablespoons. Or 1/3 cup. 
  • Some recommendations end up with double or quadruple this amount. 
  • Vicki Walsh did an experiment and her numbers are similar to mine. She went with about double in my example. But then she did round down a bit. 
  • See, this is real messy chemistry here --- seems no one is certain. I think the reason is it depends on the water coming out of your tap. Not all tap water has the exact same characteristics. It seems that most are good with a 'rule of thumb'. 
  • Go with 1/2 cup of soda ash per final gallon of dye bath. Dissolve it in 2 cups of very warm water. 
  • Some day I'll test this more thoroughly myself. I read somewhere that one expert who travels a lot to teach, finds that things come out noticeably different in some places and she concluded after some experience it was due to differences in local water chemistry. But it seems most important to not have too little; using too much is wasteful of supplies and your time. 


Cocktail Hats

This is the kind of hat I can deal with (I generally hate hats -- for many reasons that don't all make sense when I write them out). I stick with hoods in the winter. All day long (including sleep wear with a hood).

BUT if I ever get to the Kentucky Derby, I want to participate. Discovered the name for the crazy small hats. They stay on with combs, pins, or elastic band.

Check out these google results for [british cocktail hat]

There are so many styles of hats -- explained here. Do visit.

Preparing Fiber Reactive Dye Solutions

  • Mix dyes ahead of time to use time to assist with fully dissolving the dye
  • 16 ounces bottle work well - right size, tight caps, fit in 6-pack, easy to shake 
  • First, determine how much dry dye you need - Dharma Trading has a of amounts. They've created a calculator. Very Nice. 
  • I use mass amounts to decide the amount of dye powder. 
  • First, add the dry dye (using the small 'weighing boats'); 
  • No urea (urea is a help to dissolving). I may not need it because of the characteristics of my local water supply or because of my willingness to prepare my dye several hours ahead of time (check with experts such as Paula Burch). 
  • Add 12 ounces plain warm water. 
  • Cap and shake. 
  • Add salt, usually 1 tablespoon; shake again, and wait. 

Note on Measuring Dye: I use information provided by Dharma Trading to determine the amount of dye and go by weight -  measuring in grams using digital scales and weighing boat. (Term to use for googling: dye yield).

Detailed information on how much dye to use from Paula Burch. Includes information on "%owg" (percentage 'on weight of goods') 

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Resources connected to DJT's ascension to power

Investigators and Intelligence Actors
How Trump is slowly destroying America's national security agencies by
Jeffrey H Smith

Connecting the Dots
Trump's Russian Laundromat by Craig Unger

Actors Slammed by Trump Loyalists

Dossier author was in contact with Obama Justice Department by Byron York (Bruce Ohr)

Christopher Steele
Glenn Simpson

Nunes is single minded: Nunes has been pursuing how the FBI may have used the dossier, including whether it was the basis of starting a counterintelligence investigation. From House to Subpoena Justice Department Official on Trump Dossier

Interview with Luke Harding, author of new book: Collusion
A reporter who met with the former spy behind the Trump-Russia dossier explains why it’s not ‘fake news’

Rachel Maddow Reveals Senators Could Have Met with Russia Dossier Author Christopher Steele, But Didn't  10.5.17

Who is Christopher Steele, the former British spy who created the Donald Trump Russia dossier? 1.13.17; UK media

About Bruce Ohr: Dossier author was in contact with Obama Justice Department 12.5.17

The FBI wiretap on Paul Manafort is a big deal. Here’s why. 9.19.17

The White House response to Trump’s accusers, dissected 12.11.17


Timeline
July 2016: secret warrant to begin the probe into Trump’s campaign and associates