Friday, 16 November 2018

How to become a little bit more self-sufficient (even if you live in the city)



Being more self-sufficient also means saving a bit of money. This is what's called a 'win-win', I believe! If this is super new for you choose one item off this list, and start from there.


1. Have some herbs in pots in a sunny window.


My kitchen is too dark to keep plants in, so all of my herbs, and my lemon and bay trees have ended up in my daughter's 'study'. She likes being surrounded by plants while she works, and her window faces nearly directly south, so everybody is happy. Between this and my outdoor herb garden I haven't had to buy anything except annual herbs for years, and I have enough to give away as gifts, as well as make my food extra yummy for the whole year. I honestly believe this is why my roast chicken and soups are as good as it is. Fresh, or freshly dried, herbs really do make all the difference.



Friday, 9 November 2018

Planning a dye garden for myself

If I'm lucky this is what we'll get done this coming summer. I forgot to label the water barrel (bottom right) and the composter (the yellow and brown box at the top), and the small shed (empty white box at the top).

Friday, 2 November 2018

Medieval plant dyes (and modern)


As long as you have red, yellow and blue you can mix and match to make almost any colour. Some of these dye plants are more resistant to fading in sunlight or getting washed out of the fibre than others.


Any plant name that is in bold is a perennial (or biennial).

Red - 
Medieval EuropeanMadder (Rubia tinctoria)Lady's Bedstraw/Cleavers (Galium verum)

Other
- Amaranth (Hopi red dye), Dyer's Alkanet, Henna (Lawsonia inermis) (shrub), Joe Pye Weed, Dyer's Woodruff (Asperula tinctoria), Brazilwood (tree)


Orange - 
Medieval European- any yellow + Madder, or just Madder itself

Other
Dyer's Coreopsis (Coreopsis tinctoria), Orange Cosmos, Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia fulgida 'Goldstrum') (edges into dull yellow)


Friday, 19 October 2018

Dye, you fool!


Madder and dyer's chamomile. Dyer's chamomile smells just like chamomile tea, so my daughter didn't hate this as much as weld. Thank goodness she wasn't around for the woad.












I always used to get orange out of madder, but I've got the hang of it now. This is the madder with dyer's chamomile. The picture doesn't do the colour any justice. It's a quite nice tangerine.











Friday, 12 October 2018

Fall herb harvest

 Chives and parsley. They're hard to air dry so I'm going to put them into the freezer. I have a dehydrator somewhere... I suspect it got put in the crawl space when we moved in, and I hate going in there. Freezer it is!
















Saturday, 15 September 2018

Roman award scroll for Gaius

The scroll on the right is something I did for a Roman soldier persona in the SCA. The script is the kind used by Emperors on down to school kids in the late Roman empire, and nobody bothered to write neatly on paper (or papyrus, which was what was available then). The two bracelets are supposed to be armillae, a military honour which is vaguely cognate to an Award of Arms in the SCA. Apparently Gaius was extremely happy. He tracked me down online to offer me a bottle of mead, which I would never turn down! But it really isn't necessary. Knowing that he was so extremely happy is everything I needed. (And sincere thanks to Nicolaa de Bracton for fixing up my Latin boo-boos).
Green tea-dyed Arches hot press watercolour paper dry-brushed with thinned Sienna gouache to look like papyrus.

Friday, 7 September 2018

First Attempt at Mead


It takes me a long time to work myself up to trying something new. I'm always worried that I'll mess it up and end up having wasted my time and money. However, in this case, everything is either cheap or reusable.

I keep bees, and earlier this summer I was trying to do something with one of my hives (I can't remember what now), and I ended up with a frame of unfinished honey. This honey smells a little off, but it's perfectly safe to eat. I suspect there were some odd flowers or something that went into this batch. It just doesn't taste very good in my tea.

So, I saved it in the fridge until I was ready to try making mead. I have enough of that honey to probably make just about five gallons of this stuff.