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Continue Tie dye sweatshirt patterns As the saying goes: what's going on around, come around! Dyeing tie back from the 70s (and 90s too) in a big way! It appears to tie the coloring clothes and accessories appear everywhere, from clothes and skirts to sweatshirts and sweating, for suit baths,-thinking, tote bags, headbands... list go through! We're fully boarding a breathing train here at The Neon Tea Party and SO excited to share our best binding coloring tutorials and tips with you in this blog post! Be sure to check out our preferences of Tie Dye Kits and supplies to get addicted to everything you need to tie dyes like pro! In this post, we cover Tie Dye 101: how to make preparation, binding, dyeing, and washing silent items. As far as patterns, I'll guide you through some of the most famous patterns like swirl, bullseye, and scrunch, as well as rainbow arcs and funky shibori-inspired techniques that create triangular or compartment patterns across your fabric. Stay tuned for upcoming posts where we're going to dive into more advanced techniques and ideas! But for now, this blog post is a place to learn the basics of dyeing tie. WHICH TYPE OF COLORING You want to USE You are interested in the simplest and fittest coloring options, I can't recommend enough Tulips® Dye Binding Brand®. A step in the names of these kits refers to the missing steps to soak up the clothes in the mixture of water and soda ash before dyeing, making this kit so easy to use. Just add water to the dry dye powder in a neat squeezing bottle, shake and color your heart! Tulip® One Tie Step Dye® The rewind pack is included in both of our Diy Tie Dye Kit sizes – Deluxe Kit comes with all 9 pretty colors, while our Starter Kit comes with five colours of your choice! If you plan to tie the dye using a cloth dye other than Tulip® One Step Tie Dye®, be sure to follow the instructions on the dye package as there are additional steps involved including soaking fabric in water and liquid dish soap, soda ash, and salt. Be sure to follow the instructions on the coloring package for the best coloring and color results. IMPORTANT: Dye maintains his potential for just 48-72 hours. I recommend activating only the colors and amounts you plan to use in certain sessions to avoid the wasting of valuable coloring. Keep this in mind when choosing the kits and dyes you plan when using, too. WHAT DYEThat NEEDS IS REALLY up to you! One essential requirement for anything you coloring is that it is natural fiber: cotton (100% only!), silk, rayon, and feathers of all great options. Acrylic/polyester fabrics will not work, and will not be any type of mixed cloth. OTHER SUPPLIES YOU is a packed business! Having the following items in hand will help you save your project, your space and yourself as packing as possible throughout the process. Bath tab or large baldi water (for wet cloths and glove gloves that increase between colors)Squirt Bottle*Rubber band*Plastic table cloth* (although dead on grass)Metal shelves & dulang or towelsrubber towels towel absorbentRubber or bag smockZiplock or plastic wrap (plus Sharpie if you do this with friends!) Cardboard + scissors (for square and triangular patterns only)Fabric pencils or bookmarks can be washed (for rainbow arc patterns only)*Showing items come in our DIY Tie Dye Kit! TIE DYE PREPIt is recommended that anything you plan for a coloring is washed first with a little wash and nothing else (no fabric cladding or dryer sheet). This eliminates any potential waste from the fabric and shrinks it to size if it is new. To t-shirt in this tutorial, I skipped the move and the dye came out okay (should you want to skip the step too!), but I'm sure the dye will come out better had I decided to wash the shirt first. If you're using Tulip® One Step Tie Dye®, prep just over steps: dunk items in the water and ring excess water. If you're using another type of dye, be sure to follow the exact instructions on the dye. Don't skip any steps! IKATANOnce your belongings are old and damp, it's time to tie! Start by selecting the patterns you want, then follow the steps below to learn how to tie your item to get the results you want. You will use rubber bands to protect patterns in place. Make sure you tie your rubber band snugly to prevent too much coloring from leaking between folds and eliminating the white space. Scrunch & BullseyeScrunchA scrunch pattern is one of the easiest to create. Just scratch your cloth towards the center to form either a long snake-like shape as described above, or a round crossed blob. Band your inventions spread across multiple directions to protect scrunching in place. BullseyeA classic coloring patterns, you can choose to do one big bullseye over the entire item (pictured here) or smattering smaller bullseyes, as in the example below. To create a big bullseye, identify the point you want to be central. Pinch the cloth at that point and pull your item upwards from that point to the rest of the fabric falling down. Wrap the rubber band under the middle point, then tie the extra rubber band in addition to the bottom of the cloth until you are close to the bottom. Small Bullseyes, Swirl & Triangles/SquaresSmall BullseyesYou can create smaller bullseyes patterns by placing your fabric and tying small eyes around the surface with rubber bands. I recommend replacing two rubber bands at each point to make two rings on each mini bullseye. This helps ensure that the pattern remains true by its name. SwirlAnother classic coloring patterns, swirls are very satisfying to create. Identify where you want your swirl center, pinch the cloth in that place, slowly twist the cloth over and over again until a swirl begins to form. Once all your fabrics have been put in a swirl embody a large sphere, the band of fabrics is like a pizza chip so that your swirl feels safe. Triangles / SquaresTriangle and square patterns are usually seen in the creation of indigo shibori dyes. This method both are the same - the only difference is how you fold the fabric in the second step. The first step is to fold your fabric into a long path. If coloring the t- shirt, make sure you fold the sleeves. Next, accordion-fold your fabric as well as in a triangle or square form. Make sure you are going from front to back to create the correct accordion folds. Finally, cut into two pieces of kadbod slightly smaller than the shape of your folds. Sandwic cloth folds between the two pieces of kadbod and wraps the rubber band around to get. Kadbod prevents dyes from filling the complete surface outside, creating the same negative space that will be dissinganed between the folds. Rainbow ArcThis rainbow pattern is very fun to create! Start by painting the top and bottom of your rainbow arch into dry cloth using a washable cloth celler or washable markers. Next, slowly fan-fold the fabric along each of the two lines so that each drawn line begins to appear continuously on the surface above your folds. You may want to pinch both groups and pull them from each other as you go to straighten the folds between them. Once all the fabrics along the archaic lines are collected, band your fabric on each of those lines. Then add additional bands between the two outer bands to identify the space for each color of your rainbow arche floor. If you prefer a video to show you how to do this, Mr. Tie Dye on YouTube has a useful tutorial. This same method can be used to create a variety of patterns. You can also fold the shirt in the first half before painting the ark to create a rainbow of two classic arches. DYEINGThe way you tie your cloth is half the battle, and the way you beg is the other half! Follow our application methods backed up below to reach the decisions depicted in this post or have fun experimenting with different color placements! PrepDyeing is a packed business. Before touching the dye, make sure you have gloves on your hands, a tablecloth on your work surface, and a smock or apron. Set a metal rack on top of the dulang or place a piece of paper towel slightly larger than the item you are dead on, and place the item on the shelf or paper towel before it dies. Shelves or paper towels will catch excessive dye and prevent it from collecting under your creation and leaving the dye where you don't want it to go. Dye IntensityAnother an interesting thing to note is that you can adjust the color intensity of the dye by playing with the dye-to-water ratio. Tulip® One Step Tie Dye® is quite fierce to begin with, so if you want to see more pastels, shake some of the dyes from the dye bottles that have been before adding water, or if you have an empty dye bottle that is partly empty, add more water to dilute the staying dye. However, you can test the color of your dye before using it on your fabric by singing a little on the paper towel. The color will become less fierce after washing, so make sure you take into account it when deciding whether color is what you're going to do. Selecting the ColorsColors Used next to each other inevitably bleeding to each other, so putting colours next to each other that looked nice when mixed was a good idea. Pink on the blue side might create a purple peek while the yellow on the red side will create a little orange. However, purple on the yellow side will create chocolate splotches, which are less than ideal. In short, avoid placing complementary colors next to each other. If you want to use a set of complementary colors next to each other regardless, be sure to leave enough white space between each coloring section so that the color can bleed to white, rather than each other. SwirlThe the main reason I recommend your swirl appeal rubber like pizza pie is because that's also how you will apply to die. Choose as many colors as you want, place them in order of colors that combine well together, and apply in pieces. Flip your pie and use the same color to the back. This method produces perfect spiral strips as examples described in this post. BullseyeBullseye is simple when it comes to coloring. Each howned part can be a different color or whole can be a color! A white ring will appear where the rubber band is so it's really up to you what color you want to ring a bull's eye. Small bullseyesI recommend the dye of each nub bullseye before dying of another item. Take each nub at a time, hold it from all over the fabric, and carefully apply the dye. Each nub can be one color or as many colors as there are parts. Once each nub has died, place the item out flat and carefully apply the dye to the remaining surface area. Triangle/SquaresThis is one of those patterns that I prefer to color one single color, but you can add different colors to the fabric to make a mixture of various colors of funky. Turn the folded cloth as you go to keep you the dye every surface exposed. Also, the more white you want to appear, the tighter the rubber band you should to prevent the dye from dripping in the fold, so adjust accordingly. ScrunchWhile the above example is covered only in black dyes, the color confetti looks great, like a strip. Again, be sure to leave enough white space between colors that might bleed together into the chocolate. Rainbow ArcApply is a different color for each section sneaked in the rainbow order of your choice. You can wet your item before using a dye so that the dye flows easily on your fabric, or leave your item dry and massing the dye into the fabric to make sure it takes time. Examples in this post are done dry, different edges on the rainbow. You can leave the top and bottom of your items white or dye with any color of your choice. I find the pastel color works well here. SOAKING, BERKRINSING &; WASHINGOnce you've completed the coloring process, you've come to the hardest part: wait! There's nothing like expectations of letting your dye soak and waiting to see how your creation turns out. SoAKWhen you finished dead, spot items in a separate ziplock bag or wrap with plastic wrap to keep the item moist during the coloring set. Choose any of the simplest methods will prevent different colors from contacting each other. For example, long and skinny bullseye may be better wrapped in plastic packaging like burrito, rather than cooled to fit into a plastic bag. Leave your items sit overnight to absorb dyes, or follow the length of time shown on your coloring instructions. In general, the longer you let the dye sit, the more intense the color will be. RINSEOnce your coloring has been set, it's time for a moment of truth. Throw those gloves back, go to the sink or tab and remove the rubber band to reveal your creation! Rinse each item separately under hot water, rinse the excess dye until the water runs clear. If you rinse multiple items, make sure you won't pile them on top of each other as you go, because the wet dye will be moved. WASH &; DRYBe certainly washs the items immediately after wrinkles as the color can bleed into white if they sit down and will stain those areas. If you have to wait, it is better to place your item flat at the same time so that the wet color does not run to other parts of the fabric. You want to wash each item individually with nothing else in the machine. Set the load to large, hot water, and add a little cushion. Dry each item individually and also without a dryer sheet. Single items can stick to the dryer wall so if you have a tennis ball, you can throw them away with an item to keep it dry all the way. Wash your creation individually for the next couple washing up to prevent the remaining coloring from staining other items. And there you have!! All the secrets of our dyeing!! If you still have any questions, feel free to leave them in the comments below, email me at marisa@theneonteaparty.com or DM address on Instagram on @theneonteaparty. Be sure to @theneonteaparty so that we can see what binds to the amazing taste of the coloring you create!!! We can't wait! Good to death!!!! 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