I may be late to the party to ask. It looks that the gentleman applying is using pure dye. Some say dilute with water, is this true? I’m looking for a rich deep color.
@@bandannaalmanac Thank you. Stumbled upon Studio D'Artisan's hickory kakishibu denim which looks to be the original fabric that Kapital used as well. . In hopes to mimic the same results with a pair of vintage hickory denim I have.
@@nopenada8071 I’m pretty sure those fabrics are totally different. The Kapital denim is sashiko and only made for Kapital. Color wise they’re sort of similar but it’s not really surprising it’s just a color name and there’s probably no kakishibu in the original base fabric like the Kapital ones.
Thank you for the time. My apologies for assuming the same fabric. I only mean the “pattern” that resembles hickory looks to be the same from both companies. Thank you again.
hey is this the stuff all jeans manufactures use on the ready to wear stuff you can buy?
Nope.
I may be late to the party to ask. It looks that the gentleman applying is using pure dye. Some say dilute with water, is this true? I’m looking for a rich deep color.
If you’re dyeing to get a consistent color you should slightly dilute.
@@bandannaalmanac Thank you. Stumbled upon Studio D'Artisan's hickory kakishibu denim which looks to be the original fabric that Kapital used as well. . In hopes to mimic the same results with a pair of vintage hickory denim I have.
@@nopenada8071 I’m pretty sure those fabrics are totally different. The Kapital denim is sashiko and only made for Kapital. Color wise they’re sort of similar but it’s not really surprising it’s just a color name and there’s probably no kakishibu in the original base fabric like the Kapital ones.
Thank you for the time. My apologies for assuming the same fabric. I only mean the “pattern” that resembles hickory looks to be the same from both companies. Thank you again.
@@nopenada8071 I see they do look a little similar. Thanks for your comment though!
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