This week I discovered many YouTube dye-ing tutorials - which led to my first experiments in tea-dyeing. Finally!
I had tea-towels to play with - two that a dear friend had made and gifted, as well as other, less precious versions.
Some information suggested I could dye with tea only, while others used mordants and fixatives (yep, I've watched lots of YouTube and read blogs also).
I decided to try the most basic version first - and see what happened. I made a big pot of tea on the stove-top and then put wet tea-towels in it.
The tea returned to the boil for a period of time and I then extracted the tea-towels at what I deemed was a suitable interval. The rabbit/hare pair were fished out first because I didn't want to wreck them!
I started my experiment around 10:00am. The hares came out about four hours later. The others stayed in overnight. I didn't add anything to the tea. It was just standard, strong tea (a variety that hadn't been popular in our tea cupboard)!
The tea-towels were rinsed and then hung on the line. (It was pretty working in the afternoon light, both in the kitchen and in the back yard).
I'm happy with how the hares have dried. One is paler than the other though they had the same amount of time in the tea. I think the difference is one was freshly washed, while the other had been re-wet in the sink. Maybe?!
I'm not so chuffed with the other tea-towels. They had a lot longer in the tea and are definitely darker. I'd read that it was a good way of revamping stained linen though and it's not been so great for that, or my expectations were far too high!In any case it was cheap entertainment on a quiet day at home. I bought some soy milk when shopping today, to use as a mordant for my next fabric experiment. I'll do some more YouTube research and raid the stash for suitable test materials.
The hare tea-towels have been ironed, folded and stored in my box of Easter mugs and decorations. I'm deciding what to do with the other six. Of course, they are fine to be used and washed, which will be a good test.
It will be interesting to see if the colour holds and I guess the worst that can happen is that they fade back to their starting colour.
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