Phydlbitz Past, Phydlbitz Future

Since around 2011, maybe 2012, my primary yarn has been what I called  Phydlbitz Sock, a solid sturdy sock yarn.  It was labelled as 75/25 Superwash Corriedale/Nylon, because that’s how it came to me.

Originally this yarn was spun in the U.K.   I found out just this week that the U.K. mill that created this yarn closed about 5 years ago, when I was still buying from my then-current supplier.  My former supplier contacted my current supplier and had them create the same yarn, but it was 75% 25-micron superwash Merino and 25% nylon.  And it is spun in Peru, well-known for excellent knitting yarns, so that’s not an issue for me.  This change was done several years before my former supplier retired and my current supplier took over the former’s line of yarn offerings.

But they kept the original mill’s yarn name on their label, and I have been buying, dyeing, and selling this yarn thinking it was the same yarn that I started with back then.

Doing a little research, it seems most Superwash Merino sock yarns use 18-22 micron Merino, so it is definitely a finer wool yarn than my Phydlbitz, but now I need to change my labelling.

Should I call it Phydlbitz II or Phydlbitz 2.0 or maybe some different name entirely?  I mean, I really like the Phydlbitz name as it has special meaning for me.  I could just keep calling it Phydlbitz Sock, much the same way other companies change the formulas for their product but keep the brand name.

Obviously I will change my labelling for fiber content.  I’m only disappointed that this change was made several years ago and I only just now discovered the change.

Fun With Dyes!

Happy Friday!

I’ve had a fairly good week, and I hope yours has been good as well.

I went into the dye process ready to film at least part of it.  Got all my dyes mixed and arranged, work space cleared, slippy solution in the red bowl, camera in place.  The only issue is that I didn’t have a cord long enough for the ring light, but all the other house lights were on so it was okay.    I had earlier filmed a little bit of preparing a hank of yarn at the start, and then a bit of the dye process.  I still need to film the intro and outro which may take a day or two, and then upload it all to YouTube, since I’m not sure social media will let me upload such a large video file directly.   I’ll have it done in a few days and will certain post a link when it is ready.

So I went into the dye session expecting good things, and I surprised myself with how well these all turned out.   Twinset #263-264 is the one I filmed and you’ll see that in the video.  The other Twinset I filmed was #273-274, which came out as a sort of Sage Fade.

The significance is that I did the Sage Fade entirely from the combined excess run-off of #263-264.  It’s amazing how colors work together. There was some purple, navy, teal, gold, and bits of last week’s combined leftover dye, but when the run-off got stirred together in the catch bowl, it became this amazing sage color.   I dipped the Twinset slowly so it would take up all the color, which created the fade technique.

Twinset #265-266  is a “hand-slap” application of a little sky blue and some silver gray; instead of applying dye straight to the yarn, I squeeze a little dye onto my hand, which I then slap randomly onto the yarn.  Gently slap, I should add; I don’t want to create splatter all over the work space.  🙂

Twinset #271-272 is what some might call Clown in a Blender; this type of wild splattering of colors nearly always creates fun socks for kids and grown-ups alike.  The cool thing about this mixy-mix of colors is that you do not need fancy stitching patterns on your socks; you let the color create the texture on its own with simple stockinette or maybe seed stitch for the leg of a sock between the heel and the cuff at the top.

Twinsets #269-270 and #279-280 are two variations of combining mostly sky blue and emerald, with a little smattering of aztec gold.  The excess run-off from one of those (I forget which one), created  a very pale aqua wash for #285-286; on one end of the hanks I splattered a mix of teal and turquoise, which always tickles my soul when I see it.

There are also several apparent solids, which were actually dipped solids created from mixes of dyes directly into the catch-bowl (not excess run-offs), so these are one of a kind solids that I wouldn’t know how to replicate.

These are all Phydlbitz Sock (75/25 Superwash Corriedale/Nylon, 430 yards each), and will be available at $27.50 each on the Blog Reader Specials page.   For Friday and Saturday, you may claim any matching Twinset from this week’s collection (#263-286) at $25.50 per skein, preview pricing discount.

To claim the ones you want just email me with your numbered selections and I’ll mark your selections off the Available Yarns chart below and send you a PayPal invoice.  When payment is made I’ll prepare your shipping label so your yarns can ship as soon as they are ready.

I expect to have this new collection ready to ship on Tuesday or Wednesday of this coming week.

Available Yarns: 
Rack 1 – 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274
Rack 2 – 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286

Did I Break the Dye?

Edit 16Apr25:  Here are the yarns not claimed from the Preview Pricing period:


Happy Saturday!

I started the day’s dyeing with a sense of hope and promise.  And, truth be told, the day did go pretty well.  But there were some interesting developments along the way.   I think I broke some dyes in ways I wasn’t expecting.

Some of you know I use the “waste not, want not” philosophy when it comes to my dyes.  That is, I don’t like wasting dye if I can help it.  When I am using full-strength dyes, I will wrap the yarns and gently press excess dye into a bowl below the dyeing workspace.  And then I will use the next Twinset to pick up that dye.   That is just one of the methods I use for creating some of the Fade Twinsets.

In particular Twinset #245-246 appeared to have a lilac or lavender hue.  If I’m not mistaken I was using the run-off or excess from #247-248 (which used purple, teal, and navy).  Anyway, in the bowl i stirred  it around and it appeared well-blended, and I expected a fade effect of the combined dyes.  What happened is that the purple struck first, while the little bit of navy and teal remained so the tail of that Twinset took on a pale green-blue cast without much of the purple at all.   The other Fade Twinsets (#249-250, 256-257, and 259-260) were done in a similar fashion.

My other main method for doing fades is directly applying dyes onto the yarns and moving the dye inside the pouch.  I didn’t do this method at all yesterday; all the fades this time were made using the run-off or excess dyes from the prior Twinset.  And the dyes pretty much broke.

The rest of the Twinsets are fun combinations of colors, some related and others with strong contrasts. But there are no ugly colors, just unusual combinations. 🙂

These are all Phydlbitz Sock (75/25 Superwash Corriedale/Nylon, 430 yards each), and will be available at $27.50 each on the Blog Reader Specials page.

For Saturday and Sunday, you can claim any matching Twinset for $50.00 each pair, at Preview Pricing discount.

To claim the ones you want just email me with your numbered selections and I’ll mark your selections off the Available Yarns chart below and send you a PayPal invoice.  When payment is made I’ll prepare your shipping label so your yarns can ship as soon as they are ready.

I expect to have this new collection ready to ship on Wednesday or Thursday.

Available Yarns: 
Rack 1 – 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250
Rack 2 – 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260 261, 262

 

Revisiting Old Techniques

A brisk and chilly morning in Houston! But I’ve heard other parts of the country are having it even worse, so I’ll try not to complain too loudly.  Other than the weather, I hope everyone is doing as well as can be.

I dyed on Friday and only when I was nearly done did I realize our local weather was changing and I wouldn’t be able to show yarns yesterday due to forecast rain.   Just as well — some of the Twinsets needed additional processing and that took most of the day.

On a whim I decided I would go back several years (before my surgery in 2020) and do a technique I used to use a lot.  I got set up and started, and just a few Twinsets into the process I remember why I stopped using the technique; the biggest issue is that it creates a very messy workspace that has to be fully wiped down after each Twinset to ensure colors from one Twinset don’t linger and get picked up onto the next.  It also generally takes longer to apply the dye.

Oh well, I mostly like the results and will likely do it again in the future, although I did learn a few new things, and some of the new dyes I got a few weeks ago behave differently from what I’ve used before.

Anyway, the colors are richer and more saturated and even though there are a few places that the dye didn’t strike as fully, I am happy.

Any of these would be marvelous for socks, and many would also work well for shawls, scarves, baby blankets, and other projects.  Several would work well for chain-plying, too.  I recently learned that chain-plying a sock yarn creates a yarn more akin to a bulky or chunky yarn and would be comfortably knit on Size 10 needles.

All of these are Phydlbitz Sock, and will be listed at $27.50 apiece when they move to the Blog Reader Specials page after reskeining.  For Sunday and Monday (April 6-7), you can take any matching Twinset for just $50.00 each pair, Preview Pricing discount.

To claim the ones you want just email me with your numbered selections and I’ll mark your selections off the Available Yarns chart below and send you a PayPal invoice.  When payment is made I’ll prepare your shipping label so your yarns will ship as soon as they are ready.

I expect to have this new collection ready to ship on Wednesday or Thursday.

Available Yarns: 
Rack 1 – 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226
Rack 2 – 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238

 

Playing with an Idea

I am playing with an idea. I know I have described the process I use for making Twinsets in various techniques. Many (too many?) years ago I even made a video on YouTube showing me making a few Twinsets. I am thinking about making a new video showing how I do it, start to finish — pulling hanks from cones, the pre-dye soaker, laying yarns out for dyeing, steaming, the wash-and-rinse, the reskeining after drying …. the whole thing.

If I could trim it down to the salient points, is this something you’d like to see? Should I do shorter videos, breaking the steps down into a series? What techniques (dye application) techniques would you want to see?

Comment down below, or drop me an email (ray@knitivity.com) and let me know what you think.