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I'm new to this, and I recently started on a belt.  I dyed it, dried, neatsfoot oil, dried, and then resolene.   I've tried both diluted and nondiluted resolene and I'm still getting transfer.  I thought I did a really good job of buffing the excess dye...  is there something else I could've done wrong?

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Did you use USMC black?

That one is notorious for bleeding.

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I use Fiebings Oil dye, or Pro dye, same thing now. Alcohol based.  I use it 50/50 with alcohol added. It goes a lot farther and still great coverage. Let it dry well, buff until the cows come home, then buff some more. When I use Resolene, I do at least two light coats, drying after each coat.

There are other dyes, all of which seem to be better than USMC black.

Jeff

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Mutt and Jeff...haven't heard that one in quite some time!

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59 minutes ago, alpha2 said:

Mutt and Jeff...haven't heard that one in quite some time!

I've never even used the stuff. But I have seen probably 10 threads in the last 3.5 years about it.

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4 hours ago, alpha2 said:

Mutt and Jeff...haven't heard that one in quite some time!

Haha ya my dad used to say that one all the time.

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It was an old comic.  I couldn't resist the comment.  I'm a dork.   

 

With the USMC black, is there any way to get it to stop bleeding?  If I keep pouring on the resolene (not literally) will it help at all, or should I just move on to another belt, with different dye? 

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Most people just don't use it. Search posts on the USMC Black you might find something.

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If I recall, it is just loaded with pigments.  I wonder if diluting it like 5 to 1 (alcohol to dye) would reduce the tendency to bleed?

YinTx

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