Need some imput on ready to dye fabric/batiks
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 357
Need some imput on ready to dye fabric/batiks
Our guild is having a Crayon Box Challenge where you use black and white fabric and draw out colors from a crayon box to add to them to make a different block each month. I wanted to use batiks, because I have so much on hand. Not really thinking about it in the store, I purchased a black batik and the clerk sold me a "ready to dye" white fabric that is the same weave as a batik. The more I think about it the more I am worried about the "ready to dye" fabric picking up any color that may be left after pre-washing. I do have a cream batik on hand that I could use. Does anyone have experience with this fabric?
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Bosque County, Texas
Posts: 2,709
Here is what I read on the subject.
Natural cotton, after weaving and washing, is an off-white color like a light shade of ecru or cream. Normally, if the fabric is to be dyed, it goes straight to the dyer at that point. If it is to be sold as bleached fabric or made into "white" clothing, it is first bleached, washed, then often treated with optic whiteners and washed again. Optic whiteners are kind of like a white dye. While technically there is no such thing as a "white" dye, the optic whiteners occupy on a molecular level, the same spaces as dyes do. Therefore, natural, unbleached fabrics are said to take dyes better than "white" or optically whitened fabric.
So your ready to dye fabric is simply fabric without the optic whiteners added to make it look like the bright white of white cloth. Also it normally won't have any sizing in it. Otherwise it is exactly the same cloth as any other. There is nothing in it that attracts color.
Natural cotton, after weaving and washing, is an off-white color like a light shade of ecru or cream. Normally, if the fabric is to be dyed, it goes straight to the dyer at that point. If it is to be sold as bleached fabric or made into "white" clothing, it is first bleached, washed, then often treated with optic whiteners and washed again. Optic whiteners are kind of like a white dye. While technically there is no such thing as a "white" dye, the optic whiteners occupy on a molecular level, the same spaces as dyes do. Therefore, natural, unbleached fabrics are said to take dyes better than "white" or optically whitened fabric.
So your ready to dye fabric is simply fabric without the optic whiteners added to make it look like the bright white of white cloth. Also it normally won't have any sizing in it. Otherwise it is exactly the same cloth as any other. There is nothing in it that attracts color.
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