Skip to main content

Pysanki-method colored eggs

I learned how to make pysanki -- Ukrainian, colored eggs -- in a class at Old Economy Village in Ambridge, Pennsylvania about 35 years ago. Traditional pysanki are made with poisonous dyes that must be handled carefully and kept away from food and food preparation areas. To make the designs, a stylus called a kistka holds melted beeswax in a tiny funnel. The beeswax is used to create a design by blocking dye with  successive layers of wax. When the egg is finished, the wax is removed by heating the egg in a candle flame and wiping the eggshell to reveal the design. My teacher said it is not necessary to remove the egg from the shell before making pysanki, but many practitioners do this. Real pysanki are nothing like the eggs you see here. Pysanki are incredibly detailed, complex and beautiful. You can learn more about pysanki at  http://www.learnpysanky.com.

For my pysanki-style egg dying I used food coloring instead of poisonous dye, paraffin instead of beeswax, and a small, child’s paintbrush instead of the kistka. I used vinegar in boiling water as a method of fixing the color on the egg.

Tools and materials:
  • 1-2 dozen jumbo-sized eggs
  • 4 tablespoons vinegar
  • 2 to 3 oz. paraffin
  • McCormic food color and egg dye sold in a package of four quarter-ounce vials
  • small double-boiler
  • small, clean inexpensive paint brush
  • old towels, dish towels or rags to cover work surface and use on eggs
  • Scotch-Brite plastic scouring pads
  • rack for eggs
  • four 12-oz. cups or mugs to hold food-coloring bath
  • four large spoons
Cook eggs:
  1. Cover the eggs with water in a large pot and bring to boil.
  2. Turn off the heat, cover the pot and let the eggs cook in the hot water for 20 minutes.
  3. Carefully drain the hot water and cover eggs with cool water and let sit until the eggs are no longer hot, about 10 minutes.
  4. Pour off water and move eggs to dying table. 
Prepare dye:
  1. While the eggs are cooking, cover the dying table with clean rags or paper and boil a quart of water.
  2. Empty four food coloring vials, one each into four 12-oz mugs. Be careful not to splatter.
  3. Add one tablespoon of vinegar to the dye and fill the mugs HALF FULL with boiling water.
  4. Have a large spoon available for each mug.
Pysanki-method:
  1. Beginning with a white (or light colored) egg, paint swirls of paraffin on an egg. The area you cover with paraffin will appear white (or the lightest color) on your finished egg. You can paint a name or words, if you like. Try not to put globs of paraffin on the egg, because you will have to remove it all in the end. Don’t try to remove any wax if you make a mistake.
  2. Dip your egg into the lightest colored bath, remove and dry.
  3. Paint your egg with more paraffin swirls, dots, lines or whatever you like. Everything you wax will remain the color of your first dye bath.
  4. Dip your egg into the next color of dye. Remove and dry. 
  5. Paint your egg with more paraffin decorations.
  6. Dip into the final color of your dye choices, remove and dry.
Note: To avoid muddy colored eggs, dip in progression of the color wheel – for example: white, to yellow, to green, to blue; or white, to red, to purple. Avoid dipping eggs into opposites on the color wheel – for example: don’t dip a red egg into green.

Once all your eggs are dyed, scrape excess wax off each egg with your fingernail and polish off the rest of the wax with a Scotch-Brite plastic scrubbing pad.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Notes on Purl Soho Cross-back Apron pattern

Purl Soho Cross-back Apron, regular sized,  front view Purl Soho Cross-back Apron, regular sized,   back view by Linda Theil This is the Purl Soho Cross-back Apron featured on their website at  https://www.purlsoho.com/create/2015/11/20/cross-back-apron . Their page includes complete directions for making this one-size-fits-most apron with large, side-pockets and cross-back straps. This retro apron is so nicely made and looks so much like the apron my grandma wore in the Nineteen-fifties that I had to make one for my friend who appreciates the nostalgia and the beauty of this design. Although this apron pattern, as published, can adjust to several sizes from 2-10; I also made a larger option, adjusting the width of the pattern pieces to accommodate up to size 16 and up. Size adjustment may also be made by varying the length of the straps. These notes are a record of my experience with the pattern, and should only be viewed as...

Notebook cover from Arabesque

by Linda Theil I just finished making the "Crafted Life Companion" notebook-cover designed by Australian Ali Phillips of Arabesque Scissors . I've made several of Phillips' patterns and have come to experience Phillips as creating at the same stratospheric level as English designer Diane Spencer Ogg for brilliant design innovation and attention to minute specificity in their patterns. Both creators are also highly professional and skilled presenters in their step-by-step demonstration videos for every design. Please see Phillips' video at the end of this post. The Arabesque notebook cover is designed to fit an A5 notebook size, and includes a sleeve for notepads up to 4 x 8-inches. Other pocket options are included in the pattern -- most of which I left out in my first version. I did take advantage of a marvelously useful innovation Phillips provided: a beautifully designed "coloring page" that helped enormously to keep all my pattern pieces organized....

Free gift bag pattern from Spencer-Ogg

by Linda Theil This quick-as-a-wink "DIY Gift and Goody Bag" pattern is available at no charge on the Spencer-Ogg website ; and a video tutorial can be viewed on the Spencer-Ogg YouTube channel . This pattern generated so much enthusiasm among Spencer-Ogg afficionados this holiday season that Diane Spencer-Ogg released a  "MORE sizes for the DIY Gift and Goody Bag"  auxiliary pattern with an extra-small, and a large addition to the  small and medium sizes available in the initial release. This raw-edge design can be made in a wide variety of materials. My sample shown above is the size small, measuring about three-inches-square when finished. The material I used is from a Cricut brand sampler of pebbled, faux leather that is made from polyurethane. I pulled this product from a stashed package that may no longer be available in this format or design. Be aware that your material will need to be cut almost three times the width of your finished project. In other words,...