Originally posted by swims
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any cotton dyeing recommend?
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well the polyurethane / spandex is synthetic, so it won't absorb the dye. since its only two percent, you may have a chance of dyeing them but its possible the material won't absorb it as well and you'll end up with either a lighter colour / somewhere between the original and desired colour, or an uneven result.
if it was a mild change it would be less risky (for example dark grey to black), but if its a really light colour, its possible it'll end up some sort of dark grey. Also, its likely that the stitching is also synthetic, so if its light as well, it will stay so.
if you decide to try, I would use a good amount of dye and salt. if you use something like Dylon, the temperature needs to be at least 40C for it to work. some stretch fabric may require cold washing or 30C, but personally I've washed such garments in 40C as well without any problems. 50-60C can harm the material."AVANT GUARDE HIGHEST FASHION. NOW NOW this is it people, these are the brands no one fucking knows and people are like WTF. they do everything by hand in their freaking secret basement and shit."
STYLEZEITGEIST MAGAZINE | BLOG
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i have a black shirt (100% cotton) but it's pretty faded from being at least a decade old. i'd like to think that if i wore it in a business environment, suppose an interview, it wouldn't go down to well. got a pack of that dylon velvet black dye and i intend to use it on this shirt. i don't want to achieve jet blackness though, just a bit more black to breathe some new life into it so i'd probably only use half a pack in the washing machine.
should i be worried that it'd come out uneven?live for conflict / die for heaven
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DYEING techniques ( specifically undyed seams)
I realize that dyeing is an art & such but is there a specific technique to how LUC gets his pitch black pants to have a texture to them but more importantly how to retain the original un-dyed color at the seams.
I know cold dyeing might reproduce this but its impossible to get true blacks that way.
Maybe he uses a dye resist along all the seams?
I know Zamb has made pants with a similar effect but the effect is very apparent whilst Luca's is very subtle & only shows when the garment is stretched
Almost like its painted on
EG :[IMG][/IMG]
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could be wrong but i believe when the garment is done sewing, it is 'object dyed' and the seams dont take up the color naturally. might be more obvious when the fabric is of a heavy weight. so the dye resist is natural and doubt theres any tape or whatever.
the longer you soak the less obvious the seams become and as for the color/texture its probably the specific dye itself in combination with the fabric
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Of those of you guys/girls who had success with Dylon Velvet Black. Were you using the machine type or hand dye packets?
If anyone used the hand dye, how many did you use per item?
Trying to put some black magic back into some Drkshdw poplin skirt shorts.
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Originally posted by Null12 View PostOf those of you guys/girls who had success with Dylon Velvet Black. Were you using the machine type or hand dye packets?
If anyone used the hand dye, how many did you use per item?
Trying to put some black magic back into some Drkshdw poplin skirt shorts.
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Yeah, one item at a time is what I would of guessed for best results.
Noted about the machine type.
I am curious now, I see you mentioned "again," did you do multiple dye runs back to back or did you mean after a while of use?
I went ahead and purchased a "Rit" 8 oz. liquid bottle to dye some light weight cotton fabric to test that out as well. Going to get a nice cauldron as well to go ahead and summon colours outside...
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