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LILAC Hand Dyed on So Silky Sock - Semi-Solid Yarn with Speckles

LILAC Hand Dyed on So Silky Sock - Semi-Solid Yarn with Speckles

Regular price $33.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $33.00 USD
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1 in stock

Lilac is a light purple with some tonal variation and darker purple speckles. It's one of my core semi-solid colorways and matches so many of my variegated colorways.

YARN BASE
I dyed this soft lilac on my So Silky Sock Base made of 50% superwash merino and 50% silk. This is so lusciously soft!

YARN FACTS
Lilac on So Silky Sock
Garden Collection
Tonal Colorway with Speckles
437 yards / 3.5 oz / 4 plies
50% superwash merino / 50% mulberry silk
Care: Hand wash cold and air dry

YARN PAIRINGS
Lilac would go beautifully with Monet's Cathedral, Northern Lights, Party Like It's 2029, Purple Delight, or Phantom of the Opera.

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TIMELINE
This yarn is dyed and ready to ship. I ordinarily ship in 1-2 business days.

QUANTITY
I show multiple skeins of yarn in my photos so you can see the small differences between each one, but each skein is sold separately.

NEED MORE?
If you need more than I have in stock, check out the Dyed to Order section of my shop.

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DYE METHODS
I use a number of different methods for dyeing yarn. I list the method in the yarn facts section of each colorway, and you can also search by dye method. Here's what those methods are:

Assigned Pooling Colorways - These colorways have about 75% of the skein dyed in one color or color combination (called the background color) and the other 25% dyed in something that is distinctly different (called the accent color). You knit or crochet along until you get to the accent color, and then you do something different. Look for knitting patterns like those by Dawn Barker of Barker Wool that are made for assigned pooling colorways. I have some of my own as well. You'll find lots in the knitting world, but assigned pooling patterns are also started to gain popularity in the crochet world. 

Block Variegated Colorways - Block variegated colorways are dyed in distinct sections of one color followed by another color. They typically have somewhere between 2 and 8 colors. These can pool, but if that isn't what you want, consider adjusting the number of stitches just a little bit or using a different stitch for the yarn.

Ikat Colorways - This method involves using a resist to keep the dye from certain areas of the yarn on the first dye round. Then those areas are filled in with different dye colors in successive dye rounds. 

Planned Pooling Colorways - Planned pooling colorways are a type of block variegated colorway with between 2 and 5 colors that can be used for planned pooling projects like those Mary Bird offers for crochet in her book, Yarn Pooling Made Easy, and Laura Bryant offers for knitting in her book, Artful Color, Mindful Knits. These create really cool effects, but they take some patience and experimenting.

Semi-Solid Colorways - Semi-Solid colorways use a single color of dye, but there's usually some variation in the depth of shade. In other words, some parts are a little lighter and some are a little darker. Some of these colorways also have speckles. If so, I mention that in the description.

Splashed & Speckled Colorways - These colorways have multiple colors that are placed over the skein in short segments of no more than an inch or two at a time. They often have speckles as well, which are small dots of dye. Because of the varied placement of the dyes, each skein tends to vary more than with other colorway types. Splashed & Speckled colorways are not likely to pool. 

Tonal Colorways - Tonal colorways are similar to semi-solid colorways, but they contain different shades of the same color. For example, a tonal colorway that is blue will have multiple shades of blue.