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"DYES ON THE DECK "
Welcome
to Dye Symposium workshops ”California style”! We did our
mushroom dyes in a different manner than in previous Symposia.
Due to the limited amount of fungi that we have been able to
collect, instead of doing large skeins of dyed wool for samples
for the entire membership, those Symposium attendees participating
in the actual dye workshops concentrated on experimenting with
yarns and mushrooms, each one preparing and recording their
own samples. Samples
of wool yarn premordanted with alum and iron were provided to
each group. There were extra pots
available for the “unexpected”,
opportunities for changing the pH of the dyebath, to expand
the possibilities and add to our growing body of knowledge about
mushroom dyes. There
was also time to “Dye your Own” on the Friday-free-for-all ”potluck
dyeing”.
This
was our chance to experiment with the fungal bounty of the West Coast
of the USA and to share and exchange our knowledge with other Symposium
attendees from abroad.
Fungi
were generously donated from the states of Washington, Oregon, California,
Idaho and Wyoming by many fiber friends of the fungi. We thank you!!!
All
illustrations of mushrooms are © by Dorothy Beebee and are from
Miriam C. Rice's new book "Mushrooms
for Dyes, Paper, Pigments, & Myco-Stix". The wool dye
samples were compiled for me by Symposium attendees and dye afficianados
Janet and David Bianco.
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MUSHROOMS |
DESCRIPTIONS |
DYE
RESULTS on WOOL |
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Phaeolus
schweinitzii
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Gymnopilus spectabilis
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Phaeolus
schweinitzii: With
an alum mordant, this large rust colored "Dyers Polypore" will
yield luscious yellow and gold dyes when it is used fresh. We used
a combination of dried fresh specimens and new fresh ones that were
found at the base of Douglas Fir trees on Symposia forays.
Gymnopilus
spectabilis: Fresh & dried
specimens yielded a buttery yellow dye on alum mordanted wool from these
large golden yellow mushrooms which are often found in clusters on dead
Bishop Pine. |
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Dyes from Phaeolus
schweinitzii and Gymnopilus
spectabilis |
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Dermocybe
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Hypomyces lactifluorum |
Dermocybe
malicoria gp: Another
lover of pine trees, this lovely Dermocybe has the typical umbonate
cap, cinnamon brown in color, with brilliant orange gills and a yellowish
stalk. If you cut the cap and stem lengthwise, you see olivaceous
tones in the flesh. The peachy apricot colors of the dyes are intensified
if the pH of the bath is adjusted toward acidic.
Hypomyces
lactifluorum -
the "lobster mushroom" is a parasitic mushroom that
contains some anthraquinone pigments similar to those found in the
Dermocybes. |
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Dyes
from
Dermocybe
malicoria (4 on the left) and Hypomyces lactifluorum (2
on right) |
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Dermocybe phoenicea var. occidentalis
This
favorite of the California mushroom dyers, sometimes called the "Western
Red-Dye" for
the beautiful red and rose dyes it produces, is often found in the
Bishop pine woods of Mendocino County.It is also seen in the
mixed conifer, madrone hardwoods with a cap of polished dark red
(sometimes called "ox-blood red"), with brilliant, luminescent
red gills, and a yellow stalk. |
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Dermocybe
semi-sanguinea
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Dermocybe
semi-sanguinea Much
like the Dermocybe phoenicea in coloration and habitat, Dermocybe semi-sanguinea is
found occaisonally along the Mendocino Coast, in the same Bishop Pine
and mixed conifer habitat. However, this lovely mushroom has a light
brownish-fawn colored cap atop its brilliant red gills and straw colored
stalk. The dried specimens that we used for dyes were collected in Oregon
and sent to us by Anna Moore. mi |
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Tapinella
atrotomentosa |
Tapinella
atrotomentosa, (=Paxillus
atrotomentosa) is a lovely velvety brown- footed mushroom that
sometimes gives us violet dye, sometimes green, sometimes blue...
We had a lot of dried specimens to experiment with, achieving a range
from purle ot sdark green, depending on which mordant had been used. |
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Omphalotus
olivascens |
Omphalotus olivascens
This
"Jack O' Lantern" mushroom has a yellowish orange cap with olive
overtones, and gills of the same color descending down its stalk.The
trumpet shaped mushroom can often be found in massive clumps
at the base of hardwood tree stumps. We used dried specimens to achieve
almost instantaneous violet and lavender dyes on wool samples.
This is the first time that this mushroom has been used at an International
Fungi and Fibre Symposuim! |
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Hydnellum peckii
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Sarcodon imbricatus |
Hydnellum
peckii is
a toothed mushroom with a whitish-pink suede-like cap, (often covered
with dark red droplets whe young), but then turning a dark brown
with a pinkish edge when it matures. We intensified our blue
green hues by changing the pH of the dye to 9 using washing soda.
Sarcodon imbricatus was
used in 2 forms - frozen and dried. Note the dfference in color
between the two.
Sarcodon
laevigatum was
a new dye mushroom brought to us from Idaho by Connie Nelson Dried
specimens dyed lovely shades of green without any adjustment
of pH.
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Early
American Crafts |
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SPECIAL
EVENTS |
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