Mothering Forum banner

Tie Dying question- help please?

624 Views 7 Replies 6 Participants Last post by  Colorful~Mama
Hi! My husband & I have tie dyed alot of stuff in the past, using Rit dyes, but have had trouble w/colors fading. I've heard there is a way to "set" the colors so they stay bright. Does anyone know how to do this? Also, I've seen procion dyes mentioned alot --can anyone tell me more about them...are they better than Rit dyes and why? Thanks for your help! We'd like to take up tie dying again, but want to do it "right" this time.
See less See more
1 - 8 of 8 Posts
Yes, procion dyes are fiber reactive dyes that will not fade like RIT. YOu can purchase them from dharma trading (the link the other poster gave) but you can also find fiber reactive dyes at some larger art supply stores.

To use procion dyes you need to wash your items first (most dyers use synthropol a textile detergent but you can use regular detergent if you make sure they're rinsed well), then soak them in soda ash fixer - that is what sets the dye. The procion dyes are powder and you mix them with water. Some ppl use different things depending on what kind of water you have and what effects/styles you're using - urea is commonly used for example. Sodium algenate is a dye thickener. etc.

after u've and soaked the item, squeeze out the excess it so its just damp. Then I tie, wrap and fold.
I use squirt bottles for tiedyeing. I mix the dye,water and urea then use the squirt bottles to apply the dye to the fabric. If you're tiedyeing and not vat dyeing you can use plastic bags to wrap the items so they can set over night. Untie in the morning and rinse till the water run clears before washing in the machine.

good luck and have fun. If you're not sure what you really want to do - you might just pick up a tiedye kit at your local craft store (or even walfart if you dont' boycott them) and give that a shot since they give you soda ash and premixed squirt bottles of dye/urea.
See less See more
I second Dharma trading co. There colors are super vibrant. I used to do arts and crafts at a camp,and we would soak our stuff in vinager(why cant i spell that word tonight?oh well) for like 20 min. before dying.But the soda ash is the best way to go,to help make colors not fade.
Thanks ladies!
I loved the dharma link, and I sooooo appreciate all the advice and information, colorfulmama! Thanks!!
See less See more
Those dyes are great! I worked for a big a&c company, make sure you heat set the garment. Let colorsd stand at least 18 hours before rinsing, rinse until water is clean. then wash in hottest water garment will allow, and put in dryer until completely dry.
can you mix the dyes in a bottle to make colors before applying?

i have a kit with standard red, yellow, blue. i wondered if i got an extra squeeze bottle if i could make purple and then apply it

also, what if you want a lighter shade of teh color? can you add more water? or is it a matter of using a different dye?
Quote:
i have a kit with standard red, yellow, blue. i wondered if i got an extra squeeze bottle if i could make purple and then apply it
yep... thats exactly what you'd do. you can also make green and orange that way

Quote:
also, what if you want a lighter shade of teh color? can you add more water? or is it a matter of using a different dye?
yes, but if you add too little dye or too much water you'll get a very washed out look instead of just a lighter shade. its all trial and error
See less See more
1 - 8 of 8 Posts
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top