Hey Pete

Thanks for the idea. Could you please tell me a bit more about the
"vinegar-fixed dyeing".

Cheers
David C
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 4:28 AM
Subject: Re: [VFB] New materials


>
> >If you're feathers are plucked I liked the microwave trick Joyce told
>me.  I throw them in the microwave for a minute and let them cool >then
repeat it a couple times.   That will kill everything.
>
> Hi everyone,
>   Being a 'lab rat', I felt I had to mention this one: A pressure cooker
works wonders.  Those fancy hospital sterilizers - autoclaves, they are
called - work in the same way.  Pressure to 15psi, and some steam, creates a
condition which kills everything shy of a spore.  Seeing as our birds don't
have Bacillus anthraxis (that is anthrix - at least one would hope they
don't have it!), you're fairly safe with a simple pressure-cooking for, oh,
15 or 20 minutes.  Just make sure the feathers aren't in the liquid-phase
(water) or it warps and even fades the feathers.  I use a raised grate,
myself.  I use this on lamb's wool, too, and it works just fine.  My color
stays, even after a vinegar-fixed dyeing, so I'd *GUESS* that feathers are
similar after dyeing.
> Just my 2 cents...
> -Pete
>
>
> ________________________________________________________________
> The best thing to hit the Internet in years - Juno SpeedBand!
> Surf the Web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER!
> Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today!

______________________________________________

E-mail Disclaimer and Company Information

http://www.absa.co.za/ABSA/EMail_Disclaimer

Reply via email to