Members Rich1 Posted July 25, 2018 Members Report Posted July 25, 2018 I have fiebings light blue and turquoise leather dye. I have tried to dilute with isopropyl alcohol and denatured alcohol. I need a very light blue. I can get color I want on white paper but when I try on scrap piece of leather it's always to dark. I have tried to put on extremely thin, unsuccessfully. Thanks for any advice anyone can give me. I have successfully got pink from red before but can't seem to get the blue. Quote
Members battlemunky Posted July 25, 2018 Members Report Posted July 25, 2018 I love that particular shade of blue. I made a sheath for my EDC knife that matches nothing I wear. I finished the edges in red. Looks like Capt. America. I wish I had some help for you but I don't. Quote
Members Rich1 Posted July 26, 2018 Author Members Report Posted July 26, 2018 Ran into another problem with this today. Used turquoise dye straight out of bottle let dry about 12 hrs got color a little darker than I wanted but could live with then put super sheen on to seal dye and it turned black on me. I have no idea what I did wrong, open for any comments. Thanks Quote
Members battlemunky Posted July 27, 2018 Members Report Posted July 27, 2018 You wouldn't happen to have any pics would you? Quote
Members Rich1 Posted July 27, 2018 Author Members Report Posted July 27, 2018 This was before I put super sheen on. I took a surgeon scalpel and scraped black off and lightly sanded then redyed. Rubbed bees wax over then applied resolene. I got a little color but still not happy with. Quote
Moderator immiketoo Posted July 27, 2018 Moderator Report Posted July 27, 2018 The problem is that the color is transparent and it allows the color of the leather to show. Its combining with the blue to create blue with brown in it, thus darkening it. The only real way to get that light color you want is to us nearly white leather or use acrylic paint. Some aniline dyes are more vibrant, but they're hard to get in the states due to the toxicity. Quote Learnleather.com
alpha2 Posted July 27, 2018 Report Posted July 27, 2018 How about instead of dying it blue, you use acrylic paint in blue or turquoise? Maybe even white coat first, then the blue, for even lighter blue? Jeff Quote So much leather...so little time.
Members Rich1 Posted July 27, 2018 Author Members Report Posted July 27, 2018 Thanks for all the help. The guy I am making for was happy with when I showed him today. I thought about paint idea but I was afraid over time it would crack and he doesn't want cracks. Surprise birthday gift for his wife. Thanks again this was learning experience. Quote
Members Rich1 Posted July 27, 2018 Author Members Report Posted July 27, 2018 This may sound crazy but if I used white paint as you say and then blue over will it crack through dye like some of paints do over time. I have never tried that. I tried some pretty crazy things to me. I used barge cement on piece of scrap trying to block then use blue. Just curious. Thanks. Quote
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