Members Somawas Posted August 15, 2011 Members Report Posted August 15, 2011 I found I needed some royal blue, 1/8" lace. Decided to try dying the Tandy/Tejas natural.lace. Pulled out the Laier/Stohlman books on working with color to see what dilute ranges I needed to try, Pulled off 24' of natural lace and put it in a glass. Added 10 parts water and 1 part Eco-Flo Marine Blue. Covered the lace in the glass. In about two days, the lace absorbed all the dilute dye. I did it again 10:1 water to dye. Color got more uniform, but not more intense. After two days, the lace was dry and stiff in the glass. Dropped the lace into a glass jar. Went to my Tandy store. My manager and i discussed whether I should have used some deglazer on the lace to get rid of the finish on the grain side. It appeared to be gone after the four day soak. Picked up a bottle of neatsfoot compound and poured it over the lace in the jar. Let the lace soak in the neatsfoot compund. It came out supple and ready to use. This experiment worked well. Exceeded my expectations. Quote
Members Somawas Posted August 16, 2011 Author Members Report Posted August 16, 2011 I used some Feibing's light blue spirit dye with another strand. It, too, dyed well. Color was more intense than I wanted, even after diluting per Laier's recommendation. Quote
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