My latest effort has been trying out discharge dyeing on black shirts. This was pretty successful in my dyeing class, but I didn't get a chance to do it myself on the black shirts. So now that the class is over, it's my turn!
I took several black shirts of various sizes and brands (or at least models) and did them the way I'm used to doing shirts: in my favorite tie-dye patterns. I did a couple in the spiral tie (one as a "spiral", the other as "rays" or "sunburst"), one in my favorite V pattern, a crinkle, and one shibori-style just smooshed up (technical term) diagonally and tied.
I experimented a bit with the thickness of the Soft Scrub With Bleach. I was mostly using up the partially-filled squeeze bottles of Soft Scrub that I had left over from my class--I hate to waste anything, but it was time to start reclaiming my squeeze bottles.
Here is the "rays" shirt. I coated it thickly on one side.
Here is the "rays" shirt with the thickly-coated side. Note the bright lines.
Here is the side coated with diluted Soft Scrub.
For the crinkle shirt, I coated one side in a thin layer of Soft Scrub by rubbing it in the puddle of drips from a different shirt (no waste!). Then I emptied another small squirt bottle onto it to make the web of white lines you see here:
This is the "spirals" shirt. I did thick layers on both sides, but I did not do the two narrow stripes on the other side.
I put on thick bands of Soft Scrub on both sides of the folded V shirt.
Here is the first side of the V shirt.
And here is the second side. Not exactly what I had expected, but I had expected the Soft Scrub to penetrate more than just the single layer. It hardly penetrates at all beyond the first layer (just enough to make it look like a mistake).
For the "smooshed" shirt, I tied it pretty loosely, and pretty much used it to mop up all the remaining Soft Scrub dribbles on my table.
Here is the result. It had a thin layer of Soft Scrub, so it didn't bleach very strongly. Interestingly, though, it bleached to almost a heathery orange-grey, not to orange like the other shirts. Both this and the crinkle shirt are Fruit of the Loom Lofteez shirts, though the crinkle is a Medium and the other is a Small.
I really liked how the shirts came out, but I thought all but one (the spiral) needed, well, more. So I tied four of them back up again and redid them.
For the V, I refolded it the reverse way I had folded it before so I would get a design in the center of the plain back.

The shibori shirt just got more of the same:

The shibori shirt just got more of the same:
For the rays shirt, I bleached it the opposite way (diluted, full-strength) so both sides now have both dark and light sections:
And I did something similar for the crinkle to give it more depth, though it ended up quite different from front to back.
Front:

So I think once again I've failed in producing something boring enough for my "I'd die rather than wear tie-dye" friends, because these turned out pretty interesting (aside from their rather limited color palette).
Oh well, back to the lab again...
1 comment:
what, no poochie photos? ;) ... great shirts!
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