Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will be very hard to do this evenly.
Not if your shirt is 100% cotton and clean. Tannic waterbath dyes are pretty straightfoward, especially on cotton. You'll get "unevenness" if there's oil or staining on the shirt to begin with, or if you don't wash the sizing out of it first. Prewash and don't dry it with dryer sheets or anything and you should be fine.
Anonymous wrote:If you have access to black tea, you can do this for yourself at home. Truly. Wash and dry the garment, prepare tea, dip shirt, wait until it's dry to proof color (which will fade a bit). If you like it, run it through the dryer (yes, dry, dyed shirt into dryer; heat sets the dye). Then wash as usual with a half cup of white vinegar to remove any excess dye/tea. Tea contains natural tannins that act as both dye and mordant (dyefast).
If you're worried about it ending up too dark, you can always sample on a dishtowel or other 100% cotton fabric. Be sure your shirt is 100% cotton, not a cotton/poly blend (which will also dye this way, but it'll hit different).
This is kitchen safe; you don't need to buy special equipment or dedicated dyepots. It's WAY too easy to pay someone to do for you!
Anonymous wrote:It will be very hard to do this evenly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.
Sure, but 1) OP is going for cream/off-white, not a full tan or darker brown, so any amount of dye is probably enough for several wash cycles; and 2) if/when it fades, just do it again.
Who has the time to keep doing that? Just buy a cream blouse ffs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.
Sure, but 1) OP is going for cream/off-white, not a full tan or darker brown, so any amount of dye is probably enough for several wash cycles; and 2) if/when it fades, just do it again.
Who has the time to keep doing that? Just buy a cream blouse ffs.
OP here and I would agree with the "Just buy a cream blouse" but it is extremely hard to find a button down that isn't blinding white. Silk blouses, yes, I have no trouble finding those in cream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.
Sure, but 1) OP is going for cream/off-white, not a full tan or darker brown, so any amount of dye is probably enough for several wash cycles; and 2) if/when it fades, just do it again.
Who has the time to keep doing that? Just buy a cream blouse ffs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.
Sure, but 1) OP is going for cream/off-white, not a full tan or darker brown, so any amount of dye is probably enough for several wash cycles; and 2) if/when it fades, just do it again.
Who has the time to keep doing that? Just buy a cream blouse ffs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.
Sure, but 1) OP is going for cream/off-white, not a full tan or darker brown, so any amount of dye is probably enough for several wash cycles; and 2) if/when it fades, just do it again.
Anonymous wrote:Black tea is a fugitive dye and will fade with exposure to sunlight and washing with soap.