How to Create a Space Gradient - Knomad Yarn
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How to Create a Space Gradient

What you will need: 

Dye:

  • Dharma Trading bright aqua, purple pop, spearmint breeze, fluorescent lemon
  • – ProChem Washfast Acid brilliant violet, black, turquoise , Aljo Lily Rose
  • Citric Acid
  • 4” or deeper stainless steel trays
  • Induction double burner
  • Steam heating element like a vegetable steamer or heater/proofer
  • Reusable zip ties
  • 60 ml luer lock syringe
  • 1000 ml jug
  • Gram scale
  • Knomad Superwash Yarn of Choice (non superwash does not yield a crisp resist, nor does silk or alpaca, and thus, not as bright a “pop”)

In Today’s tutorial, we learn how to create a nebula gradient like this one!

Space Gradient yarn

The color will be fading from an aqua blue to a super deep space blue/violet and the speckle concentration (to represent the stars in space) will be fading from 12 per repeat to 2, so the gradient is doing two different things simultaneously, the color moving in one direction and speckle density moving in the opposite direction.

As the color gets darker, the speckles fade to almost nothing, just like the edges of a nebula! Perfect time, with the new James Webb telescope images, to pick a nebula to recreate in yarn form and knit your way across the galaxy!

Step 1

Determine how many skeins you want, and how many resists each one is going to have. The “sweet spot” for resists is 6-8 in my opinion, you need a sufficient amount of “dark space” around each speckle or it gets too crowded and too many stars, not enough dark matter. This is 6 resists evenly spaced:

resist dyed yarn

In our example for today’s nebula, we’re using 9 skeins. 

  • 12 resists (6 ties over both “legs” of the skein)
  • 12 resists
  • 10 resists
  • 8 resists
  • 6 resists
  • 5 resists
  • 4 resists
  • 3 resists
  • 2 resists

undyed yarn

Step 2 

I chose this blue to purple nebula because I loved how dramatic it was, but also easy to replicate with my favorite dye brands. Moreover, you can pick any nebula, but one that skews 1-2 colors will be easiest to create a gradient with, the rainbow nebulas require a lot more thought, planning and work. 

Here’s the formula for the background colors:

  • Skein 1: 1% bright aqua with a few drops purple pop ( gram of dye per 100 gram skein)
  • Skein 2: .5% purple pop .5% bright aqua (.5 gram each)
  • Skein 3: 1% purple pop (1 gram)
  • Skein 4: 1.5% purple pop .5% brilliant violet (1.5 / .5)
  • Skein 5: 1.5% purple pop 1.5% brilliant violet (1.5 each color)
  • Skein 6: 2.5% brilliant violet .5% purple pop (2.5 / .5)
  • Skein 7: 2.5% brilliant violet. 5% black (2.5 / .5)
  • Skein 8: 2% brilliant violet 1% black (2 / 1)
  • Skein 9: 2% black 1% brilliant violet (2 / 1)

It is very important to mix the dye with the citric acid (about a teaspoon for a single skein) and bring it up to 210 degrees, just under a boil, and submerge the skeins dry. If you put the skeins in already wet, the dye will migrate under the ties. If you put the skeins in cold and bring up to heat, the dye will migrate under the ties.

Step 3

You need a hot, acidic dye bath and dry yarn for a crisp, clean resist like this. Let sit without boiling at 210 for 22 minutes, or until the dye is almost completely absorbed. Cool to room temperature.

soaking colored yarn

Step 4

Remove all the resists and lay your yarn out.

rinsing colored yarn

Remove all the resists.

Step 5

Mix the dye stock for the overdyeing of the white spots. The colors I picked are Aljo Lily Rose, Pro Chem Hot Pink and Turquoise, Dharma Flourescent orange, bright aqua, purple pop.

dye the resists

dyes for resists

Step 6

Time to overdye the resists! I mixed 2.5 grams of dye powder per 1000 ml water.

dyeing the resists

I like to use the absolute minimum of dye and massage it in so I don’t get too much “dye spread.” I don’t want the pops of color to be more than 1 or 1.5 stitches. Less is more. I chose to put the colors in rainbow order, you could choose to do all 1 color, or different saturations of 1 color, or random rainbows, or rainbows in order. Lots of options! If in doubt, make some mini skeins with different resist color orders and make swatches to find your favorite combination.

As you can see, I chose a happy neon rainbow, and as the colors got darker, I cut off the blue/purple speckles and concentrated on just pink/orange/yelllow as those colors pop the brightest in the finished piece.

Step 7

Then, heat set your skeins. You can wrap in plastic wrap and pop in a steamer or a heater/proofer. I do not ever recommend the microwave, as you get hot spots and the dye color unevenly sets as well as the overheated spots being weaker in the finished project. Finally, let’s leave the microwave for food, not heirloom quality garments out of fine Peruvian wool!

Step 8

Knit your way through the galaxy on a luscious wool base from Knomad Yarn!

celestarium tile colored

Nicole Frost

Frost Yarn was born in my Father’s studio kitchen in 2008 with fisherman’s wool and food coloring. I was newly sober, and I latched onto yarn like a woman shipwrecked on an island. Yarn was my salvation. When corporate America turned its back on me, I took that as a challenge and threw everything I had into yarn. I went shop to shop peddling my Kool-Aid dyed, hand spun yarn. My husband Martin and I met in 2011, and I gained a relentless cheerleader and best friend. Thanks to his support, Frost Yarn grew from one woman furiously dyeing in her kitchen to working with some of the most talented fibre artists in the world and teaching dye workshops around the globe. As Frost Yarn has grown, so has our family and our love for the Fibre Arts. We currently spend our days picking fibre out of our hair and chasing Beatrix, 2 and Jules, 6 around.

One response to “How to Create a Space Gradient”

  1. Debbie Fister says:

    I am a bit confused. I will have 9 100 gram skeins Rach dyed a different color so 9 different dye baths, right? However,v the picture shows several skeins in a single bath. I think the resist idea is intriguing and the yarns beautiful.

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