How to Do Ombre or Gradient Tie Dyeing | Tie Dyeing

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2013
  • Watch more How to Tie Dye videos: www.howcast.com/videos/510697-...
    I'm going to show you how to do ombre gradient tie-dye now. For that you'll just prepare a normal immersion vat. I prepared this one by mixing my dye, which I choose a blue color in water with my dye activator, which is washing soda.
    For the ombre you want to prepare a dye vat that is a little bit more concentrated than usual, and you'll see why in a few. I started my fabric just wet in fiber and I made these marks in the salvage of the fabric that will sort of guide me through the ombre, marking the changes from dark to medium, and from medium to light.
    Those are just like guidelines marks, and if you make them on the salvage you will be able to cut them. After you dyed, if you're ombreing a shirt and you don't want the marks in there, you can just put safety pins or threads or something that will allow you to identify.
    So I start with my fabric wet as it should be, before any dying technique, and I'm just going to start dipping it into the dye bath. First I'll go as high as my medium color, maybe a little bit above the line trying to keep a pretty straight front line, and then I'm going to start raising it and dipping it, and raising it constantly.
    What you're doing here, you're pretty much making gravity work for you. So keeping the fabric in a vertical position, the weight of the fabric will start pulling the dye out, making this line here that still appears pretty solid, sort of like fade through.
    At the same time, you always want to keep the bottom of your fabric, which is going to be your darker color, immersed into the dye solution, so the dark shades can start building. The reason why I keep pulling it up and down is to avoid building up very rigid horizontal lines. So by pulling it up from the bath and putting it into the bath, I'm just changing where the line is happening.
    This process is very basic and beginning way to make an ombre. You can get great results out of it, but it also involves a lot of physical work. You have to be here working it out for at least half an hour. There's more complicated processes to do in ombre that will allow you to get also get better results.
    One of them would be by making at least three different dye baths, all with different concentrations, and then dipping your fabrics. First in the lighter one, moving it to the medium, to the darker, and then you sort of build gradient by-lines.
    Another way you could do the gradient is by painting the dye into a wet fabric and really like push the dye with the brush full of water. Those are all more advanced techniques I feel like you should try after you try this one. Or maybe after you try a couple of times this one, so you get a good feeling of how the gradient is done.
    You can see that my gradient is appearing. I have a pretty light stop and my medium is happening to here at the bottom. I have it darker and I've only been working it for a couple of minutes.
    You should continue to do this for at least a half an hour and then at some point
    I like to just hang it. So if you're doing this by a place that has a shelf you could just even put two clothes pins, and then just hang it from a shelf. So you don't have to be physically here for a half an hour. Your arms can get tired, so that's a trick that I sometimes do. Or even one of those clothes hangers that are circular and you're just able to hang the fabric from it.
    And this is how you do ombre dying with fiber reactive dyes.
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Komentáře • 73

  • @ethank5681
    @ethank5681 Před 5 lety +153

    Legend has it, she's still dipping the cloth in the dye to this day

  • @MrSpazzard
    @MrSpazzard Před 4 lety +44

    I know it's an old vid, but there is a far better way to do this, and it just involves osmosis, alcohol and wetting the fabric constantly... The dye just creeps up, and as long as you keep the top of the garment wet you get a far better result than this... Keeping the garment wet is the key though... The wetter it is at the top the less the dye creeps, but it is the most natural looking way to do this.

    • @safeeyab6291
      @safeeyab6291 Před rokem +3

      Ooooh! Do you use water and alcohol or just either or?
      Is the bottom also wet?

    • @holidaypenguin
      @holidaypenguin Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@safeeyab6291 The way I do it is soak your garment totally in water, take it out and hang it to let all the water pool down in the bottom. After a while, the bottom will still be very wet but the top will start to dry. Quickly flip the sheet over, holding the wet part, and now dip into your dye vat. The drier fabric soaks up more dyed water, absorbing less and less as the other side is already soaked in clear water. Pull it out and leave that bottom darker edge in the dye vat and the dye will continue to creep up, but will pool at the bottom.
      I looked up how to do this to see if there is another way, but I think the 'pre-soak with clear water' / 'keep the top wet while soaking the bottom in dye' method works best. I don't need to use alcohol personally. I have a bucket that is split in two for this, and I keep clear water in one and the dyed water in the other.

  • @leonardaquino6243
    @leonardaquino6243 Před 10 lety +113

    you should let us see the result.

  • @jacksapple5773
    @jacksapple5773 Před 8 lety +136

    i just watched a woman talking and dipping cloth in dye for 4 minutes -_-
    why didn't you show the result? how am i supposed to know if this even works?

    • @Paigeycita
      @Paigeycita Před 8 lety +8

      It actually doesn't. She didn't end up with an ombré result, she only got three stripes. If you want to see a REAL ombré, check out Karen Kavett's video on improving clothes from a thrift store.

    • @sarahamadi8140
      @sarahamadi8140 Před 8 lety

      +* Paigeycita * bhai. hui

    • @Paigeycita
      @Paigeycita Před 8 lety +4

      +Sarah Amadi What?

    • @DataCass
      @DataCass Před 5 lety +1

      @@Paigeycita thanks! this was a big help!

    • @Paigeycita
      @Paigeycita Před 5 lety

      EmTheGreat ;O No problem! :)

  • @RaederlePhoenix
    @RaederlePhoenix Před 8 lety +68

    I would have liked to see what it looked like after it was done.

  • @natasharaymond8958
    @natasharaymond8958 Před 4 lety +8

    if I were to try this I think I would do In reverse I suppose so dip the bottom to achieve a darker look. Allow to dry. Then dip again to achieve the lighter gradients at the top but get a really nice dark colour at the bottom by doubling up the colour

  • @KennedyOkami
    @KennedyOkami Před 10 lety +8

    Thanks! I'm new at sewing, I've only made to barbie dresses by had (tres chic!) and two pillows (tres...comfy?) haha! But I have big plans and ideas for designs and products. I REALLY want to make dresses, and this technique will really help once I learn how!

  • @imagineglasses7552
    @imagineglasses7552 Před 6 lety +6

    Thank You! This is a perfect beginning technique for me! I am totally using this for my Halloween costume

  • @BuddhaScribe
    @BuddhaScribe Před 10 měsíci

    You gave me several good ideas. Thanks woman 🥂

  • @PrincessOfDarkness87
    @PrincessOfDarkness87 Před 10 lety

    This is pretty cool.

  • @clairewallace797
    @clairewallace797 Před 10 lety +3

    thank you this is soo helpfull

  • @mieyi
    @mieyi Před 3 lety

    thank you for the tutorial!!

  • @mitsy565
    @mitsy565 Před 10 lety +18

    aint nobody got time for that

  • @maryp1040
    @maryp1040 Před 6 lety

    Super nice .. Gracias!!!

  • @distinctivefabric3083
    @distinctivefabric3083 Před 8 lety

    Ill try this right away

  • @origamigek
    @origamigek Před 6 lety

    very cute, very informative, 10/10 smile and twinkely eyes

  • @MixieMoon
    @MixieMoon Před 10 lety +2

    what color fiber reactive dye did you use?

  • @shahidanasir1016
    @shahidanasir1016 Před 7 lety

    nice work

  • @Saiyosakato_id
    @Saiyosakato_id Před 7 lety

    interesting, new knowledge for me,
    May I know what your coloring?

  • @sparkwelleventsstyling7439

    Thanks so much mam... Uh so cute.... N uh explained everything so nicely.. Thanks so much love uh dear

  • @YHusky
    @YHusky Před 10 lety +1

    thanks!!!

  • @sway--designs
    @sway--designs Před 8 lety +6

    i get headaches when someone talks to much in a video am interested in

  • @princedaniel2821
    @princedaniel2821 Před 9 lety

    What dye shoud I used?

  • @sam195027
    @sam195027 Před 4 lety

    If i want to manufacturer 100 tshirt do i have to do one by one or how

  • @MegaBusterMovies
    @MegaBusterMovies Před 8 lety

    Im dying some black pants with a sort of crimson red rit dye. I want to do a fade on them and i was wondering if the pants are still going to be able to soak up the red properly?

    • @ErelimHawke
      @ErelimHawke Před 8 lety +2

      +MegaBusterMovies well, have you already bought the pants and dye? if you haven't, id get some red pants and black dye - trust me, with some looking up on the internet or in the right stores, youll find the exact red pants you need! itll be much easier since you pretty much cant dye black without bleaching it first

  • @woosh90
    @woosh90 Před 9 lety +1

    ***** would this work on tulle also ?

  • @leshawnbillingsley9127

    yes she does

  • @sofiesongekittelsen3407
    @sofiesongekittelsen3407 Před 8 lety +2

    How does it work on synthetic chiffon?

  • @guicr5481
    @guicr5481 Před 10 lety +2

    Nice teaching *-*

  • @pattywolford
    @pattywolford Před 2 lety

    Thanks.

  • @silverhaze8737
    @silverhaze8737 Před 9 lety

    Hi, I dyed my t-shirt using this method, but then when I made the first washing with the washing machine - as I feared- all the upper white side turns out pink (I used a red color). How can I fix the color and wash ombré dyed wearing without this happening?

  • @DVPofficial
    @DVPofficial Před 7 lety

    Intelligent tho

  • @khadijamohammed4353
    @khadijamohammed4353 Před 7 lety

    waw

  • @ulec-han
    @ulec-han Před 4 lety +1

    pretty sure im in love w her

  • @elin3801
    @elin3801 Před 9 lety

    We don't have tie-dye where I live, can I use something else?

    • @princessnikki2741
      @princessnikki2741 Před 3 lety

      You can bye it online. Also you could just find regular fabric dye possibly at your local craft store.

  • @codelucky
    @codelucky Před 3 lety

    How safe is it to wash with other white fabric?

  • @hokulea1234
    @hokulea1234 Před 10 lety

    I have 5 yards of fabric. How can I Ombre dye large fabric?

    • @Divadestruction19199
      @Divadestruction19199 Před 10 lety +1

      Fold it so that all of it will be covered. Fold it small enough to where it will fit into the opening of the box/bucket. :3 XD

  • @MylkT1023
    @MylkT1023 Před 10 lety

    would this work on polyester satin?

    • @amaitheweirdcatartist6957
      @amaitheweirdcatartist6957 Před 6 lety

      MylkT1023 no it actually wouldn't because the texture is so much thinner than cotton

    • @janieallen161
      @janieallen161 Před 5 lety

      Only natural fibers can be dyed if I remember correctly

    • @chibikomeh
      @chibikomeh Před 5 lety

      @@janieallen161 There are dyes for synthetic fibers, but they're harder to work with (like some require you to work with boiling liquid, not impossible but harder). They are also less likely to be effective and may ultimately damage the material in the end.

  • @johntonog9435
    @johntonog9435 Před 9 lety

    hey i like you"re tatoo

  • @briannacastro319
    @briannacastro319 Před 10 lety +1

    Her arms must hurt!

  • @truthofdsp
    @truthofdsp Před 11 lety

    No, you aren't

  • @Gunn3rA1
    @Gunn3rA1 Před 11 lety

    First

  • @Mrscreepypastas
    @Mrscreepypastas Před 11 lety

    Second

  • @Htiat
    @Htiat Před 8 lety +11

    it's like she has no soul while talking sooo much.. ergh..

  • @larayahgibson6677
    @larayahgibson6677 Před 9 lety +7

    U talk toooooooo much

  • @MrTedbear999
    @MrTedbear999 Před 11 lety

    She's a girl

  • @princessnikki2741
    @princessnikki2741 Před 3 lety

    Wtf do you even know what ombré is? And you didn’t even show it when it was done. Didn’t help at all thanks anyways.

  • @alliyah8061
    @alliyah8061 Před 11 lety

    Second

  • @leahmartins77
    @leahmartins77 Před 11 lety

    Second