You're like the Bob Ross of tie dye, and I love you. Seriously your voice is like so soothing. I love you so much !!!!!! Thank you for putting your time into this channel:)))
Love it! This is the first time I have come across a tie dye project that is thoroughly described by someone who is actually well experienced in what he is talking about. I am a dyer and I salute you for a great tutorial and the generosity to share it. Live long and prosper ;-)
You’re not only amazing at tie dye you are an excellent teacher. Xplaining clearly and concisely what’s important and why. Thanks for sharing your skill. 🤙
that is the best tie dye video I have ever seen and the most beautiful tie die shirt I have ever seen. I am going to try that. keep up with your video they are great (greetings from Paris🙋)
Found you on ATTD. Man You are on a level which I am not. I don't know but one other person in my town that tie dyes and they are still a baby too. This video helped my technique significantly seeing the surface you work on, and the way you shaped it to keep it flat. Subcribe!
Much thanks fellow duden. I didn't know Addicted to Tie Dye was still going on, FB group or website? Glad this wound up there regardless. And yeah, if you can help it-- always glass.
The FB group is going strong brother. you are in the files under snow and ice dying.So many greeat artists on there but few show as much techniques in their tuts, usually just generalizations. Which I understand. Its hard to give away what youve had to put so much into. but I sure appreciate it. We are working on buying a slab or finding a window abandoned somewhere. haha
Great videos, very clear instructions. Thank you for SHARING your talent!! and your ART!! This is how more people can enjoy the process and discover that they too, are artists :)
You were the first person a few years ago I watched, you are the BEST teacher..you soothing, no music, I love watching you. Wish we could of seen end result. I bought lots of stuff a few years ago to try this..because of you. I also like seeing designs of reverse dye.. Do you do reverse dye teaching?
Where does one get the products you are using in the jars? I would love to know names or where to get it. The colors are so good!! 💜 really cool work 😎
Question; and your video is great by the way- it is not a just add water type of tutotorial and I respect that, but what about flimsy fabrics such as for bathing suits? They can be given evenness to both sides, though I am guessing it's tricky to do so with less to work with ( say for a two piece.) And pointers for enthusiastic beginners ? I had a thought that carcinogenic does or does not account heavily for the kid- sized kits, but that's also a second question ..Thanks if you can answer them. Don't want to be reckless with a first attempt..Hope that it's no trouble to ask this in the comments below!
Nice I love your patterns I'm start one I just made 5 dyi tie dye shirts of my own from watching yours I never use to use black til today I use a bucket method lol a mop buckets works great with em
I love this. I watched it like 10 times. I tried it several times and love the results. Do you have any source for the statement that tie dye is carcinogenic? I called Dharma Trading where i got dyes, and they said it is nothing to worry about....
Hey Crispy, im new and interested in learning about ice dyeing and all and i was wondering where you got all of your powders and how much they cost? Cuz wherever i go, i always find small boxes versus the giant ones you have
Could you clarify the statement regarding the sides to be done first. You started this with the front up I believe, which was contrary to your dialogue.
I love your tutorial! You explain everything so clear and understandable, i really want to try this :) when you wanted to paint the second side of the shirt, you added soda ash. Do you have to do that too on the first side? And the dye you use, is it the fiber reactive dye? I have jars of fiber reactive dye powder, and when i create a solution for my tie dying, i add salt to the solution. Is salt also needed in this process?
The shirt is initially soaked in ash because it helps the dye adhere and retain brightness. By melting the ice on the bottom side it kind of activates the ash. The second coat is to make sure the dye takes just as well.
I agree your voice is very calming. I'm high and I could listen to you talk for hours. Super relaxing. Also what's that white powder called again? Soda hash?
What would you say is a minimum number of dyes to get a good effect? Maybe as a number of darker dyes (could you just get away with black/grey?) and of brighter dyes
Hey man so if I took the powdered dye and soda ash mixture from a tulip kit and used that instead of the one you used, all it would do would be make it less vibrant?
these dyes are mega expensive? i realise when i buy dye kits there isnt enough to saturate the tshirts as much as this. so my creation looked washed out
banana boat if you were to use liquid dye with the ice it would become very diluted and your colours wouldn't show well. you're better off using one or the other. liquids tend to yield a much different result than the ones he gets with ice dying
Dyer soap? How do you spell it, where can I buy it and does it do something better than regular detergent cold washing machine? Thanks for the Awesome video series...VERY NICE TECHNIQUE.
nisamsmradjasammaca not sodium bicarbonate, that's baking soda if I'm not mistaken. soda ash gets a very soapy texture when mixed with water, also called washing soda (sodium carbonate)
It's to make sure you get a mirror reflection on each side of the shirt. It's explained in this video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xeY73VPtjqY.html