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#1
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White wool or white cotton?
I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd
like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB |
#2
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White wool or white cotton?
On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 23:07:54 GMT, BB spewed
forth : I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB I always vote for wool. Superwash for kid stuff. Try Cascade220 Superwash or one of the Dale Baby Ull offerings. +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#3
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White wool or white cotton?
I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB I always vote for wool. Superwash for kid stuff. Try Cascade220 Superwash or one of the Dale Baby Ull offerings. I've got a Dalegarn pattern in mind, so I've been looking at the Dale Baby yarns. So the white yarn wouldn't yellow if it is kept for years? BB |
#4
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White wool or white cotton?
BB wrote:
I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB I always vote for wool. Superwash for kid stuff. Try Cascade220 Superwash or one of the Dale Baby Ull offerings. I've got a Dalegarn pattern in mind, so I've been looking at the Dale Baby yarns. So the white yarn wouldn't yellow if it is kept for years? BB I have made baby blankets out of top-quality acrylics for each of my grandkids. They hold their color, wash and dry with ease and wear like iron. Olwyn Mary in New Orleans -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#5
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White wool or white cotton?
I have made baby blankets out of top-quality acrylics for each of my grandkids. They hold their color, wash and dry with ease and wear like iron. Olwyn Mary in New Orleans I'm already working on an acrylic blanket and there will probably be more of those for everyday use and for them to do with what they want. I also wanted to make one extra special one that I would hope would be saved and handed down in future years. For that one, I thought a natural fiber might be better. If white wool would turn yellow, then I should think about alternative colors. BB |
#6
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White wool or white cotton?
On Mon, 21 Aug 2006 01:49:52 GMT, BB wrote:
I have made baby blankets out of top-quality acrylics for each of my grandkids. They hold their color, wash and dry with ease and wear like iron. Olwyn Mary in New Orleans I'm already working on an acrylic blanket and there will probably be more of those for everyday use and for them to do with what they want. I also wanted to make one extra special one that I would hope would be saved and handed down in future years. For that one, I thought a natural fiber might be better. If white wool would turn yellow, then I should think about alternative colors. If you use wool, you have to hope that the intended recipients will care for it well. Think moths. -- Barbara Vaughan My email address is my first initial followed by my last name at libero dot it. |
#7
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White wool or white cotton?
On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 23:20:05 GMT, BB spewed
forth : I always vote for wool. Superwash for kid stuff. Try Cascade220 Superwash or one of the Dale Baby Ull offerings. I've got a Dalegarn pattern in mind, so I've been looking at the Dale Baby yarns. So the white yarn wouldn't yellow if it is kept for years? BB I think any bleached white item - regardless of fiber content - will yellow with time. Use a natural (ie unbleached) white or a dyed off-white/ecru instead of white. Then nobody will notice ;D +++++++++++++ Reply to the list as I do not publish an email address to USENET. This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%. Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account... |
#8
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White wool or white cotton?
Wooly wrote:
I think any bleached white item - regardless of fiber content - will yellow with time. Use a natural (ie unbleached) white or a dyed off-white/ecru instead of white. Then nobody will notice ;D Yeah, that was Plan B. The pattern I'm looking at uses the off-white/natural. Here's a link. http://spinblessing.com/DG13502_blanket.htm I was thinking of making the flower and edging blue. Yeah, the off-white would work. Thanks, Wooly BB |
#9
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White wool or white cotton?
I have a baby blanket (mine as an infant) that is quite old and it is
something like a cream color. It seems to be pretty uniform in color and quite nice though not exactly white. Now I can't tell you whether it was all the way white ever but I do know that it is wool. I guess you might say it has "yellowed" but I really think "mellowed" better describes it as it is still quite nice. I suspect that if I keep the beasties away from it it could last for several generations. I do also have a sweater (much younger) that my mother made for me out of acrylic or some such yarn at least 40 years ago and it has yellowed more than the baby blanket and less evenly. (Don't ask me why I still have this item as I don't think I actually have worn it for at least 25 years - maybe longer.) By the way, I love Dale Baby Ull - it is wonderful to work with. I have made a number of sweaters with it. I haven't made a blanket with it yet but am really tempted by some of their patterns. Judy BB wrote: I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB |
#10
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White wool or white cotton?
Either white wool or white cotton both can last ( and stay white) for
hundreds of years. Look at old army uniforms, they were in the mud and used as hard as any kid's blanket, yet there still are lots of samples of old uniforms around, and the whites are still white. If it is going to be used and not just sit in a display case or closet, then its lasting requires that the yarn be very tightly spun - and very tightly knit- or it will fall apart long before the color changes. If you are going to knit an heirloom, use something like Bendigo 5-ply. It is a softer wool fiber than some of the British tight spun yarns, but is spun tight enough that it will wear well and many liquids will simply bead, and roll off of it without real soiling. If you use a modern, soft, "baby" yarn, it will wear out long before the color changes. So do not worry! Aaron "JCT" wrote in message ps.com... I have a baby blanket (mine as an infant) that is quite old and it is something like a cream color. It seems to be pretty uniform in color and quite nice though not exactly white. Now I can't tell you whether it was all the way white ever but I do know that it is wool. I guess you might say it has "yellowed" but I really think "mellowed" better describes it as it is still quite nice. I suspect that if I keep the beasties away from it it could last for several generations. I do also have a sweater (much younger) that my mother made for me out of acrylic or some such yarn at least 40 years ago and it has yellowed more than the baby blanket and less evenly. (Don't ask me why I still have this item as I don't think I actually have worn it for at least 25 years - maybe longer.) By the way, I love Dale Baby Ull - it is wonderful to work with. I have made a number of sweaters with it. I haven't made a blanket with it yet but am really tempted by some of their patterns. Judy BB wrote: I plan on making a baby blanket that I want to last for many years. I'd like to have white be the main color, but I wonder if it would yellow. Would wool or cotton be better for this? Or should I consider a different color? BB |
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