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Amble Dye Palette

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Color
Amble Palette
Sage
Dusty Rose
Gold
Turquoise
Eggplant

Custom dye your next project with our Amble Palette including 5 Wool Tincture Dye (WTDye) Color Packs. That's enough to dye over two pounds of yarn! Each color is shown here on a white base (top row) and our gray Renew base (bottom row). From left to right is Sage, Dusty Rose, Gold, Turquoise, and Eggplant.

This Dye Palette Contains : 

  • 1 Sage WTDye Color Pack
  • 1 Dusty Rose WTDye Color Pack
  • 1 Gold WTDye Color Pack
  • 1 Turquoise WTDye Color Pack
  • 1 Eggplant WTDye Color Pack

Wool Tincture Instructions (pdf).

Basic Instructions

1. Heat a kettle of water.

2. Drop one tea bag dye in jar, pour over hot water and stir.

3. Submerge 3.5oz/100g of fiber.

4. Gently stir in one Citric Acid packet and steep for 10-15 min.

5. Drain, rinse and dry!

It's really that simple.

Complete Wool Tincture Instructions (pdf)

Frequently Asked Questions

We love hearing about your projects! We understand that sometimes you might just need a little advice about which color to choose or how many Color Packs you’ll need. All questions and comments are welcome.

Here are two ways you can find what you're looking for.

Wool Tincture Dyes are professional-grade supermilling acid dyes. Acid Dyes get their name from the mildly acidic pH required for striking. A Dye "strikes" when its color bonds to a fiber.

Acid Dyes strike to protein fibers like wool, silk, alpaca, and mohair as well as nylon (a synthetic protein).

They will not adhere to cellulose fibers such as cotton, linen, or hemp.

We use non-toxic dyes in combination with natural citric acid. They are pre-measured for minimal exhaust, so the wastewater is harmless, mildly acidic water which is safe to drain over soil, sewer, or septic.

Absolutely! The amount of dye in each tea bag is measured precisely to give predictable color on 100 grams (3.5 oz) of clean fiber. We've found equally consistent results whether dyeing 1 or 2 skeins (100g ea) at a time in a one gallon dye jar or dyeing an entire sweater quantity in a larger pot.

We find using the dye jar to be the simplest method.

Watch a sweater overdye demo over on the School of Wool.

Yes, be creative! You can dip dye, over-dye, create ombres, gradients and multi-colored effects. When you work with resist methods or adjust the weight of fiber used with each tea bag, you will alter the strength or saturation of color. These methods might also result in excess dye in the exhaust. We suggest not using more than three tea bags per 3.5oz/100g of fiber to avoid excessive dye in the exhaust.