Kowhai means Yellow in Maori and the Kowhai is native to NZ. At this time of year there is yellow everywhere and Tui birds galore. I was at turning point the other day setting the loom when I suddenly had a light bulb moment! As you can see the Kowhai is a brilliant shade of yellow and I decided to see if I could capture some of that by making a dye from the flowers. For the record, Kowhai are a protected species so I only used fallen flowers. I kinda like the sound of "Fallen Kowhai Dye" anyway:) So, as soon as I finished the loom I went back to Yatton Park (where I found the nest) and picked up as many fresh looking flowers as I could find. I must have used a good 50 or so. Not knowing any better I decided to treat the Kowhai like Marigolds. I pulled the petals and stamens from the flowers then boiled the whole lot for 10 minutes. After straining it this is what I got.... 
It looks a little like another fluid I shall not mention and smelt a bit like silverbeet! None the less I had a lovely golden liquid to soak my paper pulp in. The pulp being white inevitably diluted the strength of the resulting colour but I was surprised at how much so! Marigold dye still stays a strong yellow (from orange flowers) when mixed with pulp. I was committed to my experiment though and continued on with it anyway.


The resulting paper wasn't exactly Yellow! It's a warm cream with a slight lean in the direction of brown! The water that was left in the vat after all my pulp was out was still slightly yellow but it didn't transfer itself to the paper as willingly as Marigold. I wonder if I need some sort if fixative? Natural of course.This experiment shall continue!
It's my friends birthday soon so I made her a Van Gogh note book. 4 signatures half the size of an A4...that's A2 right? It was actually harder to make than the bigger book but it came out ok after a bit of extra fiddling about. I used Van Gogh greeting cards to make the cover.