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What Happened...and How Can I Do It Again!

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I used Tandy's Gel Antique (Brown) for the first time on a wallet for a customer and this is what I got...

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IT'S GREEN!!!

But, I like it, and so did the customer! A few projects later, I thought I'd use the "green" again but, no mater what I did on scraps, I could not get anything that even resembled a green color... Do you think that the first time I used the product, that I did not shake it well enough and a green pigment came through, and now it has dissolved and I will not have it turn out like that again...?

Any suggestions on how I could get close to this green again with other dyes/methods...? The green water based comes out nothing like the above green...

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Thanks plowboy73! any idea how it happened in the first place?

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New container? did you shake it very well before use? Sometimes when the particles sit for a while, they need to be mixed or they separate.

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Tandy was having some issues with their dye for a while. The purple was doing some odd (but not entirely unpleasant) separating too.

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Thanks Mokosh!

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Thanks plowboy73! any idea how it happened in the first place?

I think Kings X is right about the seperation. Feibings is much more consistant.

Edited by plowboy73

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Isn't that what happens with hair dye when things go wrong - hair turns green instead of brown/blonde.

It might be due to a chemical reaction involving the chemicals in the dye - perhaps reacting with something in the air or on the leather/brush/bottle/etc., or because of the temperature, etc. For example I came across this:

Metal ion Colour

Iron(II), Fe2+ Green - turns orange-brown when left standing

Iron(III), Fe3+ Orange-brown

here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/guides/z27ycdm/revision/3

Although in your case the color change was the other way round e.g. perhaps Fe3+ changing to Fe2+ - which would be Reduction (rather than Oxidation such as rusting). Perhaps some mild alkali/soap on the leather reacted with the dye?

BTW Some copper (& arsenic) compounds are green, there are probably many others too.

Edited by Tannin

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