Thanks for the shout out, Bradd, I watched Greg, from Goyo's Garden and Tie dye, use the cheesecloth and he got great results. I think the shiitake could have been left out but I really loved the rest. The hot water should be around 160° and not boiling. Boiling cuts down on the vibrancy, in my experience anyway. I loved your tutorial. Thanks for sharing.
@@Uniquelyyours1 Hi Crystal and thanks for the kind words, I agree, the shiitake was a mistake. My kettle does not have a temperature gauge, so maybe I should take it off before the boil is too strong. Thanks.
I can’t do much with rubber bands…my fingers don’t comply😂 I love the kite string, too! Really good experiment! I also find the colors come out closer to liquid dye than the splits of ice dyeing…thus the shiitake going green brown instead of pinks and brown as it usually does with ice. Lilac is one of my favorite colors and your shirt proves what I’ve always thought…Lilac goes great with every color! Looking forward to seeing what creative ideas you’re going to make next 🙌❤️🎨🌎🌈
I watched part 1 and when you sprayed water I remembered that we spoke how this would assist, cheese cloth great idea . I will experiment later also see what happens. Ohhh and I learnt something new from you again so keep up the great tutorials. Buster E 😎🇳🇿
Brad at would have come out more blotchy with just four quadrants of the four colors. Maybe if you would have added more areas of each dye it would have come out more uniform to your liking. But it is still a beautiful shirt and I love the outcome.❤
@@timdavis3249 I don't show it because there is really no difference in the look when it is wet. But I will show the second application in a future video.
It's a good one Brad❤
Thanks for the shout out, Bradd, I watched Greg, from Goyo's Garden and Tie dye, use the cheesecloth and he got great results. I think the shiitake could have been left out but I really loved the rest. The hot water should be around 160° and not boiling. Boiling cuts down on the vibrancy, in my experience anyway. I loved your tutorial. Thanks for sharing.
@@Uniquelyyours1 Hi Crystal and thanks for the kind words, I agree, the shiitake was a mistake. My kettle does not have a temperature gauge, so maybe I should take it off before the boil is too strong. Thanks.
I can’t do much with rubber bands…my fingers don’t comply😂 I love the kite string, too! Really good experiment! I also find the colors come out closer to liquid dye than the splits of ice dyeing…thus the shiitake going green brown instead of pinks and brown as it usually does with ice. Lilac is one of my favorite colors and your shirt proves what I’ve always thought…Lilac goes great with every color! Looking forward to seeing what creative ideas you’re going to make next 🙌❤️🎨🌎🌈
@@paulafloyd-cx7mo Hi Paula, thanks for all the kind words and thanks for watching.
I watched part 1 and when you sprayed water I remembered that we spoke how this would assist, cheese cloth great idea .
I will experiment later also see what happens. Ohhh and I learnt something new from you again so keep up the great tutorials. Buster E 😎🇳🇿
@@ErikBrown-f8r Hi Erik, AKA, Buster E. I'm glad I could teach you something new and good luck with your experiment.
Brad at would have come out more blotchy with just four quadrants of the four colors. Maybe if you would have added more areas of each dye it would have come out more uniform to your liking. But it is still a beautiful shirt and I love the outcome.❤
@@timdavis3249 Hi Tim and thanks. Trying something new is always guess work.
Brad you should have showed your next application of hot water on it so we could see how it all reacted to the second pitcher.
@@timdavis3249 I don't show it because there is really no difference in the look when it is wet. But I will show the second application in a future video.
Hi Brad, what’s the water temperature?
@@justagirlsd3000 I don't exactly know, I just wait for the kettle to go to a very rapid boil. Approximately
two hundred and twelve degrees.
@ ok thanks