Carding For Color Part I
Carding For Color Part I
Spinners have a lot of artistic control over their raw material. We can choose a fiber or fibers to spin, then we can
manipulate diameter, twist, plies, and yarn texture. Add in the dimension of color, and we can create handspun yarns
that commercial mills can't reproduce. Personally, I find all that freedom a little scary—color in particular has always
intimidated me, and I've never gone to art school. But when I wanted to "design" colors for my handspun, a little color
theory went a long way.
If you want to blend your own colors, theory can help you too. Before you pull out the hand carders (or whatever blending
tool you prefer), read this tutorial and try out the exercises. You'll probably find, as I did, that your confidence with color
grows very quickly.
You'll need only a few tools for this part of the tutorial:
■ color brochures for interior paints—grab them at your local hardware store or download one from a paint
manufacturer's website
■ smart phone camera, photocopier, or scanner
■ multicolor fiber braids or photos of them
UNDERSTANDING COLOR
Color theory rests on a few fundamental terms. We can use this language to describe any color.
■ Hue is the fancy name for color. It's convenient to place hues in color families, such as red, brown, or green.
Artists also like to describe the temperature of a hue, from warm to cool. Warm colors often seem to project out
toward the viewer, where cool ones recede from the eye.
■ Value refers to the relative lightness or darkness of a color. Add white and a color gets lighter (called a tint); add
black and it gets darker (a shade).
■ Saturation indicates relative brightness or dullness. A saturated color is as bright as it can possibly be. Reducing
the saturation takes away color, until you are left with a shade of gray—a fully de-saturated color). Saturation can
lie anywhere between these extremes.*
Color wheels are terrific tools for understanding hue, color families, and temperature. They're built around a set of 3
primary colors, and they usually show the colors in between. For instance, a red-yellow-blue wheel arranges color families
from red-orange-yellow-green-blue-purple and then back to red. Each color family "slice" can also show value, as in these
examples.
Wheels based on the primaries red-yellow-blue. The wheel at left shows primary and secondary colors; in the center,
these colors range in value. The wheel at right includes more hues (tertiary colors) in a range of values.
At left, my first try from color swatches; the first try converted to grayscale; my second
try in grayscale and in color.
Outlaw
Color analysis gets easier with practice. When you can describe all the elements of a color, you can blend fiber to
match that color. If you can analyze the relationships between colors, you can design and use color combinations with
confidence. You, the textile artist, can have unlimited power.
In the next part of this series, we'll blend fiber colors, so we can learn to control and direct our new power. You'll need
half an ounce of white, black, and at least one pair of complementary colors (blue and orange, red and green, or yellow
and purple). If you have colors in your fiber stash, start collecting small amounts. If you don't, get a grab bag of colors—
they're widely available online at Etsy and other craft sites. If you have larger amounts, or more colors, by all means don't
hesitate to pull them out. Once you start blending your own colors, you won't want to stop.
RESOURCES
There are hundreds of books, videos, classes, and tutorials for color theory and color design specifically created for fiber
artists. I started with the ones listed below and keep going back to them over and over.
Colour Play Course, School of Sweet Georgia
Lo, Felicia. Dyeing to Spin and Knit. Interweave Press, 2017.
Menz, Deb. Color in Spinning. Interweave Press, 1998.
Benjamin Moore Paint Brochure
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