Showing posts with label Hand Dyers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand Dyers. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2014

An Interview with ... Yvonne Leduc of Yvieknits Yarns


Yvieknits Yarns Silk Hankies

Once a week I post interviews with interesting people about their insights on their experience of working in the Knitting industry.  I’ve noticed that every one of these individuals makes their living in a slightly different manner bringing their own unique presence to the knitting world.

You can find Yvonne's yarn and fibre here. She is here on Ravelry.

Where do you find inspiration for your colourways?
I find my inspiration for my colourways in a variety of ways. Sometimes the inspiration comes when I see something, usually on a walk, and I think I like that colour combination. Some colourways come about due to suggestions/requests from friends. For example: Lulu's Folly colourway is inspired by the colourful streaks a friend had added to her dark brown hair. Sometimes I create a colourway with a specific person in mind when I am planning to knit them a gift. An example of this is that I created the Orange Julius colourway with my best friend's youngest daughter in mind as she really loves orange. Other colourways are inspired by the results of over-dyeing a skein like The Witching Hour. My most common method, though, is that I pick one colour to start with, add it to the yarn to see how it looks and then decide where to go from there. I've learned to trust my first instincts and to just go for it. If I don't like the results, I can always over-dye the skein.



Lulu's Folly

What is your favourite dyeing technique? 
My favourite dyeing technique is hand-painting, and to be honest, it is the only method that I have tried. It is the slowest method but it is the one that gives you the most control over the final results. I love that it is easy to create short bursts of colour and that I can create subtle variations within each colour from the differing pressure of my brush on the yarn. I can see the whole skein at all times as I work so I have a good sense of what the final result is going to look like.

How do you choose the fibers that you work with?
I choose yarns that contain the types of natural fibres that I enjoy knitting with the most, like merino and bfl (blue-faced leicester), wool, silk, alpaca and cashmere. Luckily, my supplier has a large selection of yarns to choose from. I enjoy dyeing a variety of different yarns as each yarn takes the dye differently.





How did you determine what weights of yarn you stock?
I initially went with the two weights that I most prefer to knit with: fingering and laceweight. I think that these two weights provide the best value for hand-dyed yarns due to the number of metres available in one skein.  I have expanded my range of weights as I now stock a sportweight yarn and a DK yarn.

How do you come up with names for your yarn?
For the name for each yarn base, I went with a simple name that in general tells you the content of the yarn and its weight. Names like Merino Sport, Merino/Silk Fingering, for example.

For the colourway names, I generally pick a name of something that the colourway reminds of. For example: the different shades of blue and greens in my Caribbean Waters colourways reminds me of the changing colours of the sea in the Caribbean. If I create a colourway as a result of suggestion/request from a friend, I usually ask that person to choose the name. When I have trouble deciding on a name for a new colourway, I have some knitting friends who I go to for help. My friend, Sarah, in particular, is very good at coming up with colourway names.



Morning on a Rocky Beach


Could you give us an idea of how long the process is to dye a batch of yarn and prepare it for sale?
My dye batches are quite small in size and generally range from 1 to 4 skeins. My most common dye batch size is 2 skeins. The total time for the complete process from adding more ties to the skeins before soaking them to adding the labels to the skeins at the end is usually about 2 days. There is quite a bit of hands-off time while the yarn is soaking, cooling down, or drying so I usually only spend about 1 1/2 to 2 hours working on/handling the skeins directly throughout this process.

Are you a knitter as well?
Yes! I've been a knitter pretty much all my life as I don't really remember being taught by a friend's grandmother when I was little. I got serious about knitting in grade 9 when I knit myself a Lopi style sweater in my Family Living class. I have always had a few knitting projects on the go since then.

Did you do a formal business plan?
No, but I have tracked my numbers from the beginning and I always know where my business stands financially.



Merino Single Ply Fingering - Marmalade

Do you have a mentor?
I have been lucky enough to have a few mentors along the way. Genevieve of Turtlepurl Yarns (she used to live in the Ottawa [Ontario, Canada] area and we were both members of the Ottawa knitting guild back then) really helped me get started as I approached her for advice after I sold my first few trial skeins. Gen generously answered my questions and then she sold me small amounts of her undyed yarn stock a few times until I felt ready to commit to buying my first big batch of undyed yarn. My main mentor is my friend, Nelly, who created and hosts my website and has taught me how to maintain/change it myself. She provided me with lots of invaluable digital marketing advice using social media and other methods to sell my products online. She still kindly provides me with occasional support with the website and advice when I need it despite her busy schedule as she is now the co-founder of  Reachology, a digital marketing agency in Ottawa. The person I go for advice on the business side of things is my friend, Barb, who is an accountant and who answers any business or tax questions that I have. I have met a few other dyers at events in the last couple of years, like Kathryn of Riverside Studios, who I talk with occasionally about our business in general.

Do you have a business model that you have emulated?
No.

What impact has the Internet had on your business?
The internet has had a big impact and the growth of my business is largely due to my online presence with my website and in Ravelry. While most of my sales do not come through my website, it provides me with a place where I can show what my products are to yarn stores and to the organizers of various shows that I apply to be a vendor at. I get a lot of traffic to my website from different events' websites just before an event takes place, as people often check out what the various vendors have to offer. Ravelry really helps indie dyers like myself become more well-known by allowing registered yarnies to create a yarn page and to add our yarns to the Ravelry yarn database. I know that a few of the sales through my website have came as a result of someone who saw a specific project knit in my yarn in Ravelry.


Yvonne's shawl is knit in Merino Single Ply

How do you maintain your life/work balance?
I love working from home but it can be a challenge to maintain a good life/work balance as my work hours can be quite irregular and sometimes long. Due to my ability to have flexible work hours, I make getting together with friends and family a priority. I also make attending my Thursday night knit group a priority to guarantee that I get out of the house and socialize with friends on a regular basis.

How do you deal with criticism?
I'm lucky in that I haven't run into any real criticism yet, except for the odd complaint about the prices of the yarn. I do want people to happy with their purchase though and if there is a problem, I will do my best to solve it.

How long did it take for you to be able to support yourself?
I'm not quite there yet but my business is growing at a nice steady pace and I hope to get there soon.



Sparkly Sock - The Witching Hour

Could you tell us a little about your collaboration with Natalie Servant and Francine Hebert?
The three of us actually met and became friends about seven years ago at the knit group at Yarn Forward before we started up our individual small businesses. I was the last one of the three of us to start up my business. From the beginning though, the three of us have done our best to promote and support each other's business. After my website was launched in February, 2012, I came up with the idea of creating the shawl kits as a way for the three of us to work together. Francine and I then shared a booth at the first Twist Fibre Festival in August, 2012 and that was the beginning of our partnership of being vendors together. Natalie allows us to sell her patterns on her behalf at various events that we are vendors at. Our combined products have proven to work well together and enable us to create a cohesive look to our table/booths at shows. I have knit samples of several of Natalie's patterns with my yarns to display at shows, usually on mannequins and using one of Francine's shawl pins. Our "Create your custom shawl kit" option is proving to be quite popular at shows. As Francine often says - "Yvonne's the dyer (points at me), our friend Natalie is the designer and I make the shawl pins". 

Editors note: You can read Natalie's interview here and Francine's interview is here.


Lavender Fields Kit with yarn, pattern, and shawl pin


Another way that we work together is that I offer yarn stores the opportunity to buy from the three of us through Yvieknits Yarns so that our items can be shipped together to save on shipping fees.

What advice would you give someone who wants to pursue a career in hand dyeing yarns?
Start small and experiment with your colourways to find your style and what sells best for you. It is very important to track your numbers to make sure that your business is making a profit and to know which yarns and colourways are your best sellers. I would also recommend attending local events as a vendor as it is a good way to build your customer base and get good feedback from a wider audience. It is also a good way to meet other people in the business.




Friday, February 15, 2013

An Interview with...Emily Parson Greene of Sophie's Toes

October 2012 Vogue Knitting Live

Once a week I post interviews with interesting people about their insights on their experience of working in the Knitting industry.  I’ve noticed that every one of these individuals makes their living in a slightly different manner bringing their own unique presence to the Knitting world. I met Emily in Chicago at VKL. I went home with some of her gorgeous yarn in Raspberry that will most likely end up as a lace shawl.
 



You can find Emily here and here on her blog. She has a Ravelry group here and you can see her amazing quilts here.



What is your favourite dyeing technique?

I lay my skeins in a large jelly roll pan (6 at a time) and squirt on the dye with squirty (ketchup) bottles.  I set the dye by steaming them in crockpots.  I have a bank of crockpots set up in my garage and it looks like I’m having a chili cookoff!

How do you choose the fibers types and determine what weights of yarn you stock?

I always determine the fiber and weights of yarn by what I like to knit.  I knit with my yarns constantly.  I like superwash merino sock yarn and other luxury (merino, cashmere, nylon) fingering weight yarns.

Every now and then I find a new base that intrigues me and I try it for a while and see if it is a good seller.  Sometimes, I will keep it around even if it isn’t a great seller, just because I really believe in it and love knitting with it myself.  (I’m looking at you Merino-Silk).


How do you come up with names for your yarn?

People like really fun names.  I’ve noticed at shows that people look at the color and pick up a skein they like, then they look at the name, laugh, and that seals the deal!  One of the first yarns colors I sold was green/gold/brown named “Handsome Park Ranger”.  People loved it and talked about it so much that I realized the importance of a fun or meaningful name. 

Knitting is so personal, and people love to knit with yarns that have meaning.  “Christmas Lights, Farmer’s Market, Summer Vacation” are all examples of names that give the yarn more meaning so the knitter has a true keepsake.  Usually the names come to me pretty easily, if not, I take a poll of my family or my friends at Knit Night.  Somebody always comes through for me with a good idea. 

Could you give us an idea of how long the process is to dye a batch of yarn and prepare it for sale?

I am really organized and efficient when it comes to the dyeing, and I have gotten to the point where I can dye 100+ skeins of yarn in a day (a “day” being the 6 hours that my kids are in school).  Doesn’t that sound impressive?!  Ha!

However, the actual dyeing is just a fraction of the process.  The rinsing, skeining, tagging, listing, selling, packing, shipping take much more time than the dyeing.  And that’s just for Internet sales.  Add more time (preparing, loading, driving, selling, reloading, unpacking) if you are taking it to a yarn show.


Do you look at other dyers' work or are you afraid that you will be influenced by their yarns?

I am very happy with my own “style” and I don’t spend time looking at other dyers’ work in order to be inspired.  

That being said, I am a knitter too.  I do walk the aisles of the yarn shows when I get a chance, and admire other hand dyed and hand spun yarn, especially when it is done with techniques other than my own.  Occasionally something really unique comes home with me for my own personal stash.

Are you a knitter as well?

YES!  I am an avid (my family might say obsessed) knitter.  That’s how I got started down this path in the first place.  I knit a lot of socks and wanted to be able to have any color I wanted.  I was already spoiled in this way with dyeing fabric to have colors that I couldn’t find in stores.  As a quilter, I had learned a decade earlier how to dye fabric. 

The wool yarn uses a different type of dye and a slightly different process than the cotton fabric that I was used to dyeing, but I knew if I could dye fabric it was a pretty small learning curve to switch over to doing yarn also.


Did you do a formal business plan?

Well, not a formal business plan like a person would take to the bank to obtain financing.  But I do have a vision of what I want my business to be like and it is written down for my own reference.  It helps to clarify things.  I evaluate my plan on a regular basis and set yearly goals. Goals like: how much money I would like to make in a year, how many shows I would like to do, how much time I can commit.  It has changed pretty drastically, considering the fact that my youngest was just two and not even in preschool when I started this business.  Now all three of my kids are in school for a full day.  There is a world of difference between dyeing during naps and dyeing six hours a day! 

Do you have a mentor? 

Yes.  I have quilter friends who sell dyed fabric at quilt shows and they have given me lots of advice.  Melody Johnson taught me to dye (fabric) in 1995.  Her partners Laura Wasilowski and Frieda Anderson have given me lots of advice over the past few years about how to set up a booth and do shows.

What impact has the Internet had on your business?

My business was based on the Internet from the beginning.  What was life like before the Internet!?

How do you maintain your life/work balance?

This is a hard one.  With three kids ages 8, 11, and 13, we have a very busy family life.  I have learned to be very flexible, because the hours I have for work change constantly.  I now have more time during the day to work, but less time at night (oh, for the days that they went to bed at 7pm!  Now my oldest is up til 10!)  I usually try to limit my work time to the 6 hours that they are in school, but they are old enough to understand that the 2 weeks before I am going to a show that I will be fitting in work after school and evenings.   And on the flip side, sometimes we are busier with family activities -- summer especially -- and I have to let go of some of the work stuff and remember that it’s not worth making myself (and my family) crazy.

As wild as it gets sometimes, I feel very blessed that my life is so full with work and family. I think it is good for my kids to see me work hard and enjoy something that is my own.  And it is especially very rewarding when they show interest in what I do.  (And when they pitch in to help me break down the booth at the end of a show!)

August 2012 Stitches Midwest

How do you deal with criticism?

When I worked as an artist before I started the yarn business, I developed a thick skin.  It wasn’t easy, and it took a long time.  I am the oldest child, a people pleaser!  But eventually you learn that you can’t please everyone all the time. 

I have (rarely—thank goodness) seen things written on the Internet that were less than complimentary about my yarn.  Of course, it stings!  All of that hard work—putting yourself into something that you make and offer up to the world!  First, I try to look at it objectively and determine if there really is something that I need to adjust in terms of my product.  If not—if it is just negative--then I try to shake it off and just remember  a) the thing about not being able to please everyone, and b) some people are just unhappy and/or negative, and there is nothing you can do to change that. 

What advice would you give someone who wants to pursue a career in hand dyeing yarns?

I cannot over-emphasize the importance of advertising, promoting, social media.  I know people who have made things and put them on etsy and wonder where all the customers are.  But you can’t expect people to just stumble upon you, no matter how great your product is.  There is much more to having a real business than making your product.  Listing an item for sale is not the end, there is still more work to be done.  You really have to work to get your pictures and your story in front of people’s eyes. 

When I started I already had a knitting blog and a quilting website.  I was able to direct people to the etsy shop who were already familiar with my work.  I have a friend who sells handbags and she started by promoting her etsy shop to her wide circle of friends on Facebook.  Getting involved in forums helps too.  Ravelry is wonderful!  

http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/celebrating-azzus-shawl