I will praise thee, O LORD, with my whole heart; I will shew forth all thy marvellous works. I will be glad and rejoice in thee...Psalm 9:verses 1 and 2a
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Can anyone help me by translating this German label into English? I would sure appreciate it....thank you!!
Go to google.com and type in german to english in the search engine and you should be able to find a site that will let you type in the words and then it will translate them for you. I wasn't quite sure of the letters on the label and you may have to translate one word at a time. Hope it works for you.
Pflanzen means "plants" and Färberei means "dyes". So Pflanzenfärberei means "vegetal dyes". Planfzenfarbte is a past participle: "dyed with plants". Märchen to me means "fairy tale" and Wolle of course means "wool" - so maybe that is the brand of the wool? "Fairytale wool"? The last two words are the place were the wool comes from.
I was going to tell you to go to google too but I see Mary already thought of it. You will get a complete answer I bet. Hope your day is going great..Sandy
Google wouldn't help you much since the word-by-word translation is fairy tale wool. I'm also a felter not a spinner tough. But Märchenwolle is quite rough wool I don't like to use for wet felting (prefer it soft). Ideal for needle felting and for blending with soft merino wool or with nuno felting. As for spinning, it might just blend in with other fibers? Anyway, it's all naturally dyed, so you're good. Have fun with the German wool and enjoy the Toblerone!
5 comments:
Hi Maggie,
Go to google.com and type in german to english in the search engine and you should be able to find a site that will let you type in the words and then it will translate them for you. I wasn't quite sure of the letters on the label and you may have to translate one word at a time. Hope it works for you.
Mary
Pflanzen means "plants" and Färberei means "dyes". So Pflanzenfärberei means "vegetal dyes".
Planfzenfarbte is a past participle: "dyed with plants".
Märchen to me means "fairy tale" and Wolle of course means "wool" - so maybe that is the brand of the wool? "Fairytale wool"?
The last two words are the place were the wool comes from.
I was going to tell you to go to google too but I see Mary already thought of it. You will get a complete answer I bet. Hope your day is going great..Sandy
Isabelle is right. My English far surpasses my German now, but German was my first language, and I was easily able to read the label.
Google wouldn't help you much since the word-by-word translation is fairy tale wool. I'm also a felter not a spinner tough. But Märchenwolle is quite rough wool I don't like to use for wet felting (prefer it soft). Ideal for needle felting and for blending with soft merino wool or with nuno felting. As for spinning, it might just blend in with other fibers? Anyway, it's all naturally dyed, so you're good. Have fun with the German wool and enjoy the Toblerone!
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