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<title  type="text" >Aurora Fiber Arts</title>
	<author>
		<name>Taryl Giessel</name>
		<uri>http://www.aurorafiberarts.com</uri>
	</author>
<subtitle  type="text" >Comments On Post 118</subtitle>
<id>http://www.aurorafiberarts.com</id>
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<rights  type="text" >2009, Taryl Giessel</rights>
<updated>2009-01-22T08:39:03+00:00</updated>
<entry>
	<title  type="text" ><![CDATA[ Re: Bingo ]]></title>
	<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html"  href="http://www.aurorafiberarts.com/index.php/blog/show/118.html#comment297" title="Re: Bingo" />
	<author>
		<name>Taryl</name>
		<uri>http://www.aurorafiberarts.com</uri>
	</author>
	<id>http://blog/118/297</id>
	<updated>2009-01-22T08:39:03+00:00</updated>
	<published>2009-01-22T08:39:03+00:00</published>
	<summary  type="text/html" ><![CDATA[ 	<p>It's surprisingly safe - but you have to do it in spurts.  In fact I did a full-sized roving that way this afternoon as well.  With samples just microwave on high for 30 seconds (make sure they're quite wet/submerged in water) and once they start bubbling like mad stop the microwave.  For yarn you want it submerged as well, and I microwave in one minute increments, letting it cool for three minutes in between.  By 5 minutes of divided heating time the yarn has usually reached 180 degrees by my temperature probe and then I let it cool naturally and rinse/dry like any other dye job.</p>
	<p>It works remarkably well all things considered, and is very fast, but it is not a dye method you want to walk away from :)
</p>
 ]]></summary>
	<content  type="text/html" ><![CDATA[ 	<p>It's surprisingly safe - but you have to do it in spurts.  In fact I did a full-sized roving that way this afternoon as well.  With samples just microwave on high for 30 seconds (make sure they're quite wet/submerged in water) and once they start bubbling like mad stop the microwave.  For yarn you want it submerged as well, and I microwave in one minute increments, letting it cool for three minutes in between.  By 5 minutes of divided heating time the yarn has usually reached 180 degrees by my temperature probe and then I let it cool naturally and rinse/dry like any other dye job.</p>
	<p>It works remarkably well all things considered, and is very fast, but it is not a dye method you want to walk away from :)
</p>
 ]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
	<title  type="text" ><![CDATA[ Re: Bingo ]]></title>
	<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html"  href="http://www.aurorafiberarts.com/index.php/blog/show/118.html#comment296" title="Re: Bingo" />
	<author>
		<name>Leigh</name>
		<uri>http://www.aurorafiberarts.com</uri>
	</author>
	<id>http://blog/118/296</id>
	<updated>2009-01-22T05:34:54+00:00</updated>
	<published>2009-01-22T05:34:54+00:00</published>
	<summary  type="text/html" ><![CDATA[ 	<p>Very interesting series of posts.  I go through spurts of dyeing, but have never used a microwave before.  I'm a little paranoid of doing something dastardly to my yarn.  
</p>
 ]]></summary>
	<content  type="text/html" ><![CDATA[ 	<p>Very interesting series of posts.  I go through spurts of dyeing, but have never used a microwave before.  I'm a little paranoid of doing something dastardly to my yarn.  
</p>
 ]]></content>
</entry>
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