What to Know About Dyeing Fabrics | National Quilter's Circle

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I've been making quilts for about 27 years and I think I've tried just about everything there is out there in the quilting world but never have I had so much fun as when I started dyeing my own fabrics the idea of being able to put your own color in your own mark down your own fabric and then use that fabric and a quilt of your own making is just to me it's just so exciting so I learned to die and everybody that I know that dies dies in a different way we die in ways that are going to give us the fabrics that we like to use or we like to play with so when I first started dyeing I thought it was going to be just for myself and then people started really liking the fabric and I started producing it to sell and so I'm always playing with different ways of coming up with unique and different fabrics when I when I die a fabric I want it to have interest in it not just color even though color is really important I like there to be lots of texture on the surface when we look at this top dyed fabric here it's probably the simplest type of dye that I do and it is simply crumpling the fabric into a tray and then pouring on a single color of dye and you get this wonderful mottling throughout the surface I don't really like a solid looking die I could get that from a solid fabric so I always want there to be a good deal of texture on the surface of my fabrics this next fabric here was done in another type of scrunching method only it's done with a linear roll of the fabric and then you get these wonderful lines as well as all the mottling in there this was done exact same way only I used two different colors of dye so I get the wonderful mixing together of the blues and the violets this is one of my favorite dye designs and it's a resist technique and this resist techniques been around forever I learned it from a man who does indigo dyeing and this is simply a folded technique where we fold into accordion in one direction and then again in another direction to yield this wonderful square and believe it or not this was done with one color of dye when we custom mix our own dyes and we mix two different dry dyes together when we mix them together with water they tend to separate out color wise and we get this wonderful play of color this one is also a folded technique and you can see that there's a triangle a very faint triangle in there and it's an accordion fold also but instead of being folded into a square like the previous one it's folded into a triangle but these are probably my absolute favorites and they are scrunched into a tight ball and then injected with dye using a eyedropper and it's a wonderful way to get very multi colored fabrics this was done in the same way but with a much smaller range of color and this final one is a rainbow and rainbows are very fun to do also you don't have to use as many colors as I used here but it's really nice to be able to get a piece of fabric that I can get lots of different colors from and as you can see when I fold this over we have identical colorations on each side so it's a folded piece now I don't always work with fat quarters but it's one of the easiest ways to start so these particular pieces are 18 inches wide by 30 inches long because my fabric that I use is 60 inches wide the most important decision when you start doing your own dyeing is the fabric that you choose to die on this is a prepared for dyeing fabric that means that it doesn't have anything on the surface of it that could impede the dye becoming permanent you can die on just about anything you want to but if it's not prepared for dyeing you should probably pre wash it and your best bet for pre washing is a product called synth RuPaul and we'll be using synth or Paul today what it does is it's a scouring agent and it will take everything off the surface and hold it in the water so that it can't go back down on the fabric and that's what we want we want a fabric that's as clean as it can possibly be so that the chemicals can react with that ever can be permanent so in addition to really good fabric you're going to need quite a bit of different products this can be a little bit expensive when you first start but you can buy dyes and very small packaging or you can get them in much larger packaging the dyes that most of us use for cotton is called Procyon MX and I've tried about six different brands of Procyon and they all tend to work exactly the same just different companies have different proprietary blends for color so it comes in a powdered form and the powdered form it contains some really small fine particles that are carcinogenic so it's very very important that you wear a mask and the mask needs to be a grade that will hold out the size of particles that are in the dye so make sure that you're looking for this is a 95 so you need a 95 or higher you'll also need some gloves you can get really good gloves you can get not-so-good gloves you can see my my a nice blue finger here that these gloves broke through the other day and I get to wear a blue finger for a while but the gloves are nice to keep the dye off of you number one but it also keeps the dye even if it gets on you from setting in because your hands kind of get wet inside and then it doesn't stay for around so long you will need some chemicals that help the dye also so the first chemical is called urea and again not every Dyer uses urea some of us like it some of us don't really care about it it comes in these strange little balls and basically what it does is it helps to keep the fabric wetter longer and I mix it directly into my dye the other thing that is very important is soda ash and so this is soda ash here and soda ash gets mixed with water and we call it our chemical water what the soda ash does is help the chemicals in the dye adherent lead to the fabric so it's a very important product to while we can mix the urea right in with the dye we don't mix the soda ash right in with the dye until we're just about to use it because it shortens the life of the dyes once a dye is mixed so once I've mixed the dry dye in with water it can last outside of the refrigerator for anywhere from three to four weeks or you can refrigerate it for six to eight weeks but as soon as I put the soda ash in it or the soda ash chemical water in it it only has about a two to four hour life now I've used it when it's about five hours old and what we get is a lighter dye instead of the deep intense color that the dye may have been so it's it kind of kills the dye so we want to put it in as we use up the dye now in my dice to do I keep dye mixed up 24 hours a day seven days a week and we go through our containers sometimes as quickly as in two days but sometimes a container might be sitting around for two weeks and we've never found that it doesn't have the same life so you don't have to be really really really careful but you want to pay attention to how long your dyes have been mixed there's it's not really a lot of fun to finish a day of dyeing and then go to rinse and find out that your dyes had already died and there now all your colors are now light you will also need some containers that you use just for dyeing you never want to use your containers again for anything else even though the dyes are most carcinogenic when they're in their powdered form there's still chemicals that can be dangerous and so we don't want to ingest anything that's been in a container that I said died in it before so I just keep a lot of plastic containers around that I can use and reuse and reuse again
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Channel: National Quilters Circle
Views: 12,034
Rating: 4.8876405 out of 5
Keywords: quilting, quilting how to, quilt, how to quilt, Quilt (Exhibition Subject), national quilters circle, nqc, dyeing fabric, fabrics, quilt fabrics, quilting tips, learn quilting, sew, sewing, Dyeing
Id: yhdC_hxV6hg
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Length: 8min 16sec (496 seconds)
Published: Fri Mar 07 2014
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