New (for me) tie-dye techniques

Discussion in 'Fiber Arts' started by tiedyejudy, Aug 24, 2006.

  1. tiedyejudy

    tiedyejudy Member

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    I've been doing direct application tie-dye for about 8 1/2 years. Earlier this year, I began to experiment with Low Water Immersion, which is nice, but it wasn't as interesting to me all by itself. Then I tried stitching some designs, then applying the dye using LWI, and I got some pretty neat results. here are a few:



    Judy
     
  2. cerridwen

    cerridwen in stitches

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    great job :) I espcially like the third one... but all three do look excellent!
     
  3. denimstar

    denimstar edge of darkness

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    Nice, I like them all especially the 2nd/harvest colored one.
     
  4. yarrow_sun

    yarrow_sun Member

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    Those are gorgeous!!
     
  5. tiedyejudy

    tiedyejudy Member

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    Thanks, all! I'm really hooked on the way the dye spreads and takes on a look that is totally unplanned, and very organic! After doing 'planned' designs for so long, this is a real treat!

    Judy
     
  6. drumminmama

    drumminmama Super Moderator Super Moderator

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    hey judy, tell more about low water immersion. I think I'm spinning a new twist here, but I need to know if it is mechanically what I'm thinking.

    also, we don't allow links in sigs. having it in text where the topic is pertinent (like this one) is fine.
    Please change it so I don't have to. Be sure and make it your homepage, tho!
     
  7. Make Mangoes Not War

    Make Mangoes Not War Member

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    They are really rad (See? I alliterated. :p) Good job!
     
  8. crummyrummy

    crummyrummy Brew Your Own Beer Lifetime Supporter

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    Log me as part of the third one fan...but 2 is good too.
     
  9. bbbeccaaa

    bbbeccaaa 12345678910

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    Those are all really beautiful. The third one looks like some weird nebula or something haha. Really nice :)
     
  10. tiedyejudy

    tiedyejudy Member

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    Low Water Immersion is where you put the item to be dyed into a small container (scrunched really tight), then pour dyes over the garment... sometimes water in between to vary the dye intensity, then let it sit - I usually let it sit an hour. Then you pour over a soda ash solution and let sit another hour, then rinse. The variation I used was to stitch the designs into the shirt first. This added the design interest. Otherwise, the shirts would come out with a 'crystal' look. If you want a more thorough description, try Paula Burch's website:http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/lowwaterimmersion.shtml. I used her instructions to get started.

    Judy
     
  11. drumminmama

    drumminmama Super Moderator Super Moderator

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    we tritik as well, stitch dry, soak in soda ash and direct apply.
    I'm pretty snobby about dip and immersion methods but one of the tanks has great color breaks.

    how good is your control?
     
  12. tiedyejudy

    tiedyejudy Member

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    If you mean, can I replicate a particular effect, the answer is yes... to a degree. I have done the 'fern' stitch using the same colors applyed in the same order, resulting in shirts that look very close. On the other hand, I like the organic free-form effect of the dyes flowing over the garment and reacting to the way the fabric bunches up. Now I have a question: what's tritik? That's a term I haven't come across before (showing my ignorance!).

    Judy

    P.S. I just overdyed a dress that I dyed awhile back, but never liked. The overdye process REALLY enhanced the overall look. The original dyeing was a bullseye pattern done in a medium-forest green. I bound new bullseyes in other areas of the garment, then applied medium orange, rust brown and chocolate brown, and it came out looking like bronze and copper:[​IMG]
    One of the things that really jazzes me about dyeing is how forgiving it is! Not always, but very often you can take a mistake and turn it into something really neat! This is one of those instances...
     
  13. Levi

    Levi Hip Forums Supporter HipForums Supporter

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    I think those are all just fantastic. I really like how those look, maybe even more than the crisp colors of most tie-dyes. They're so much harder to find, though. Would you sell me one?
     
  14. drumminmama

    drumminmama Super Moderator Super Moderator

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    tritik is stitching used as the resist (shibori is another)
    see my page, or what's left of it, at www.tiedyepaul.com
     
  15. tiedyejudy

    tiedyejudy Member

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    I tried looking, but I'm afraid I'm not finding any references to tritik. Bummer! Do you have any pix you can post on your gallery page?

    Judy
     
  16. ledzeppelinlover

    ledzeppelinlover Member

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    i'm definitely gonna try that, no doubt. that method creates some awesome designs, including yours tiedyejudy.
     
  17. Atom bomb therapy

    Atom bomb therapy Member

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    They are beautiful....My fav is the third one. awesome
     
  18. iven we

    iven we Member

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  19. drumminmama

    drumminmama Super Moderator Super Moderator

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    Pix of the stitching in progress? That's on the burner for an instructional DVD!
    my gallery has some of our work.
     

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