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18th March 06, 04:50 PM
#1
One of my friends sent me this e-mail
The main thing with doing heavyweight dying is that you sometimes have to adjust the strength of your mordant, and do other pretreating to make the fibres ready to accept dye. These things can get to be expensive sometimes, but its more important, from what I understand, to spend a bit more money on the chemical stuff, because once the fabric is ready to be dyed, you can use a lower grade dye, and the colour will be okay. Type of dye you want to use also depends on what colour you are trying to achieve. Higher grade things can be finicky, and I know with paints, certain brands have certain colours that are really strong and good, and others that aren't. Darker colours, especially, are hardest to get, and for a heavy weight fabric especially, can require quite a bit of chemical treating.
Her other point was just to drop into your local crafts shop and ask. If they don't know specifically, they might have a good reference for you.
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18th March 06, 09:28 PM
#2
Wouldn't it be easier to tye-dye the cloth first and then sew it into a kilt? That way you wouldn't have to worry about the dye getting into the pleats at all, it would already be dyed before pleating.
This is more out of intellectual curiousity than anything else since personally I like wearing traditional tartan kilts.
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18th March 06, 09:37 PM
#3
That would depend entirely on the effect you want. Yes, it would be logistically simpler, but you also have less control over the final appearance.
Oh, and there is a chance the thread will not dye in the same fashion (or at all).
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19th March 06, 10:42 AM
#4
I'd be inclined to sew down the pleats in place, maybe vertically horizontally and diagonally, like quilting, so that the outer layers of the kilt would be dyed as though it was one thick piece of material.
When released the pleats would then show an ever varying pattern with lighter fabric showing as the pleats swung.
It would need to be very carefully tied under a lot of pressure to get the right effects on such thick stuff, but it would make a very intersting kilt.
Though - an alternative would be to find some felt tips and colour your kilt by hand. If you start at the edge of the pleats and work in strips you could have a colourful kilt in a few hours and a work of art in a few days. You might need to check the washability of the ink, or get fabric dye pens.
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19th March 06, 11:20 AM
#5
Hmmm, I wonder how well a subtle tie-die shirt would go with a tartan kilt. I know my what my wife would say; you should have seen her reaction when I proposed a patterend sweater!
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19th March 06, 11:39 AM
#6
 Originally Posted by Iolaus
Hmmm, I wonder how well a subtle tie-die shirt would go with a tartan kilt. I know my what my wife would say; you should have seen her reaction when I proposed a patterend sweater! 
to this i have one thing to say:
ITS A KILT, G** D*** IT!
WARNING: I RUN WITH SCISSORS
“I asked Mom if I was a gifted child… she said they certainly wouldn’t have paid for me."
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Ron,
There is a woman in Moscow, ID who does the tyedying for Utilikilts. Her website is:http://www.tyedye-everything.com/
I am going to school right over the border (hence my lack of posting recently) in Pullman, WA, and her studio/shop is great. I'm thinking about having her dye my natural workman's, but I'm not sure about color scheme at this point.
Anyhow, it may be too late, but she will dye the kilt for about $20. Just thought that you might like to know.
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tie dyed kilt....????
groovy mon...
show us the pics when yur done Ron....
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 Originally Posted by Geoduck
I bought some stuff from them at a craft fair a few years ago, three medium weight cotton short sleeve shirts: one in a rainbow spiral, one in a dark blue/purple chevron (they call it "V-with-crinkle" on their website" and very bright orange/yellow chevron. Beautiful shirts, still bright and now soft and comfortably broken in. Very good craftsmanship
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