Snow Fabric Dyeing!

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

9 Responses

  1. Amy Clausen says:

    Great idea! Any chance Rit Dye would work? I'd like to try and have enough snow to share if anyone wants to come get it for free…

  2. Very interesting. It is something I would love to play with more. I look forward to see your results.

  3. Leah Day says:

    I'm sure RIT will work…though I'm not sure if you need to use soda ash with it or not. Just read the package to see how the fabric is pretreated before dyeing and follow those steps before layering on the snow and dye.

  4. Would love to do this, but the idea of using powdered Procion dyes scare me to death. I'd go with Rit, although I don't think it's as intense or as durable, from what I've heard. I also don't think you have to use soda ash with it.

  5. Sharon says:

    What would be the best kind of fabric to use if I wanted to try this?

  6. jean95552 says:

    Love the look as well as creativity for even thinking of trying it. There is no way I will ever do something I need a respirator for but may try dyes eventually.

  7. Debra Ramsey says:

    I have used Rit dye. You will need to use a product called Retain or it will keep bleeding. After having too many projects with a bleeding spot on them (I have to applique over the spot) I decided to bite the bullet & use Retain on every piece of fabric I own. Yes, it took a long time, 8 months & 20 bottles of Retain, but for me it was worth it.

  8. If you put a rack or screen over your container, you can put another fabric in the bottom of the pan to catch the dye that trickles thru the snow covered fabric. It's a two for one kind of thing.

  9. A respirator is not necessary – a face mask will do fine. As soon as the powdered dye hits the snow it dissolves after a very short period of time, unless you are working outside in below freezing temps. Or you can mix up a concentrated amount and squirt it on from a bottle. It must be concentrated, more than if you were doing a low immersion dye bath. The cold of the snow lessens the amount of dye the fabric absorbs, so the dye needs to be strong.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *