DiscordantNote wrote:
Well, my mom had to dye silk for a project of hers before, and she had to use the washer to dye it (because it was a rather large piece of fabric). If you do that with your dress, be sure all of the dye is flushed out of there after you're done, otherwise it'll end up on your next batch of laundry.
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Yep, my mother and I were just going to run a load with nothing in when it was through. =)
rachel wrote:
oh, and twiz, post pictures!!
Of course! Unfortunately, I don't know how long it will take my mom to get them developed - I'm still waiting on her to develop some from April. o_o
And I didn't quote this part, but it's a Rit dye, and it's made out of powder - so it'll be going through the washer.
smudgeoffudge wrote:
Or you could try dying it with natural dyes. You'll get a funky color, but this is a civil war reinactment dance. I know yellow onion skins can make yellow, green hulls from pecans can stain things a kind of brownish-yellow, tea can make brown. You can get beets to make red. I am not sure which color would make blue, maybe blueberrys. But then it would end up being a kind of greyish blue probably. It would be fun to experiment on an old dress and not on this one, cause you could ruin it.
Funnily enough, we were talking about something similar this weekend, heh. There's a sort of flower - can't remember the name, Dyer's or Painter's something - but it's yellow, and when you boil it, it creates a purple dye. Really weird. Maybe I'll do that for a future dress of some sort - a day dress, most likely - but not this one, because like you said, it could ruin it.