Sennelier Tinfix Design - French Silk Dye
USE FOR: Silk painting - Serti, Watercolor, Salt & Alcohol Techniques, Batik on silk, Tie-dye on silk, Silk Screen (thickened)
USE ON: Silk and Wool
Sennelier Tinfix Design is Sennelier's line of ready-to-use silk dyes. Concentrated for intense, rich color. A favorite among famous French designers!
Up to 33% off list price!
Stock # Details List Price 1-4 5-9 10+
#TIND100 100 ml. (3.5 oz.) $12.10 $8.75 $ $7.75
#TIND500 500 ml. (16 oz.) $41.20 $27.50 $25.50 $
#TINDLT 1000 ml. (32 oz.) $82.40 $54.75 $50.75 $
All prices calculated in US$
Available Colors
NameSizesQuant
003 Canary Yellow ** o (Primary)
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004 Bergamont Yellow *** b
006 Daffodil Yellow ** b
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007 Aladdin Yellow ** b
008 Sun Yellow ** b
009 Cambodia Yellow *** b
010 Saffron Yellow *** b
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013 Lacquer Orange *** tb
015 Bright Orange ** tb
018 Pearl Red ** tb
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019 Coral Red ** tb
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021 Antique Red ** tb
022 Ruby Red ** tb
026 Bengale Red ** tb (Primary)
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028 Carmine Rose ** tb
029 Red Violet ** tb
030 Tyrian Rose * o
031 Madder *** tb
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034 Parme Rose ** o
037 Amaranth ** b
039 Opera Purple ** tb
040 Ultramarine Violet ** tb
041 Violet ** tb
043 Indian Purple *** tb
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045 Madder Purple *** tb
047 Violet Blue * tb
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049 Persian Blue * tb
051 Celestian Blue ** tb
054 French Blue * tb (Primary)
055 Azure Blue ** tb
056 Blue Lacquer ** tb
057 Turquoise Light ** tb
058 Island Blue ** tb
060 Celadon ** tb
061 Brazil Green * tb
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067 Verona Green ** tb
068 Permanent Green ** tb
069 Leaf Green *** tb
073 Cinnabar Green *** tb
074 Olive Green *** tb
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075 Bronze Green *** tb
077 Copper Brown *** tb
081 Corn ** tb
082 Golden Brown *** tb
083 Helios Brown *** tb
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085 Aragon Ochre ** tb
087 Madder Purple ** tb
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088 Burnt Sienna ** tb
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089 Van Dyck Brown *** tb
091 Tobacco *** tb
094 Cloud Gray ** b
096 Pigeon Gray *** b
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099 Indigo Gray ** tb
101 Indigo *** tb
103 Charcoal Gray *** tb
104 Ebony Black ** tb
Lightfastness is evaluated using a "blue scale" on wool.
*** : 8-6
** : 5-4
* : 3-2
o : 1
Reactivity to salt is evaluated on Pongee freehand with coarse salt.
tb : extremely reactiv
b : high reactivity
o : low reactivity
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Sennelier Tinfix Design Dye Thinner
IMG:SENNELIER TINFIX DESIGN - THINNER 100 ml. (3.5 Tinfix Design Dye Thinner can be used to thin Tinfix Design Silk Dyes and achieve a variety of color gradients.
STOCK# Size/Color/Style Quantity 1-4 5+
#TINDT Thinner - 100 ml. (3.5 oz.) bottles $10.50 $9.45
In Stock Now.

Jacquard Dyeset Concentrate
noimage Use this liquid fixative instead of steaming to set Jacquard Silk Colors or Sennelier Tinfix Design Silk Colors.
Stock# Description Quantity Price
#JACSET250 Dyeset Fixative - 250 ml. (8 oz.) $4.76
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#JACSETLT Dyeset Fixative - 1000 ml. (32 oz.) $14.28
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#JACSETGAL Dyeset Fixative - Gallons $38.80
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Product Description
Sennelier Tinfix Design is Sennelier's wonderful line of ready-to-use silk dyes. They have over 100 years of experience, so they had a while to figure out how to make a good dye. The colors are highly concentrated and therefore very vivid and intense. Said to prevent weakness at the edges of your paintings and capable of infinite color gradients by diluting with Tinfix Dye Thinner. As with all dye, fabrics remain soft, supple and transparent. Another great thing about these dyes is that each color is coded for it's resistance to light and responsiveness to salt techniques to help you choose.

2 WAYS TO FIX THE DYE:
STEAMING OR LIQUID FIXATIVE

1. When steam-set in a professional or home-made steamer, Tinfix Design is as good as or better than any silk dye in the world in regard to brightness & strength of color as well as wash and lightfastness.

2. If you really can't stand the idea of steaming your silk, you can also fix Tinfix Design Silk Dyes with Jacquard Dyeset Fixative. This works, but the colors come out much less rich and bright than when steamed in a steamer.



UPDATE: The Tinfix manufacturer has tightened up it's line to 50 colors. We are selling off whatever we have left in the discontinued colors so some colors above are only available in certain sizes.

Tinfix Design Thinner can be used to thin the dyes and achieve a variety of color gradients.

Silk Painting Techniques
Silk Painting - Techniques

The Serti (closing or fence) technique is the silk painting technique where designs are formed with gutta or water-based resists, which are applied to white silk that has been pre-washed, dried and stretched (on a stretcher). Once the gutta or water-based resist has dried, it acts as a barrier for the dye or paint—keeping the color within the outlined areas of the design and allowing you to achieve sharply defined borders. (Without this barrier, the dye or paint would flow into more of an abstract, undefined pattern.) After the dye or paint has been properly set, the clear gutta or resist is removed and a defining line the color of the original fabric remains. Colored guttas and resists are also available that are meant to remain in the fabric.

Detailed patterns without resists can be achieved by instead priming the prewashed and stretched silk with a stop-flow primer which is left to dry before painting on the dyes or paints. The color will stay where you put it, rather than migrating. Allows for freehand painting without gutta or water-soluble resists. Think of stop-flow primers as starch-like sizing to prepare the canvas with. They wash out in the end.

Watercolor-like effects can be achieved by applying dye or paint to silk that has been pre-washed and put on stretcher bars whether or not you are using resists (but not if you are using stop-flow). Dyes or paints are applied to the silk with a paint brush, mist sprayer, eye dropper, or other tools to achieve abstract effects. Spraying the silk lightly with water before adding color increases the flow of the dye or paint. Sprinkling silk salt on the piece when still wet, and leaving till completely dry before brushing off the salt, produces interesting textural effects. Applying alcohol to dye-painted silk also creates beautiful effects.

WHAT YOU NEED:
- Silk Paints or Dyes
- Paint Brushes
- Gutta or Water-Soluble Resist
- Applicator Bottle for the resist
- Some kind of Stretcher Frame
- A white silk item to paint on

HOW IT'S DONE:
Step 1: Prewashing your silk
Step 2: Preparing your design
Step 3: Making a Stretcher Frame
Step 4: Stretching your silk
Step 5: Applying gutta or resist
Step 6: Applying dyes or paints
Step 7: Setting/Fixing the color
Step 8: Removing clear gutta or clear water-based resist

Step 1: Prewashing your silk
Pre-wash your silk by hand or in the washing machine on a gentle cycle with warm water and Synthrapol. Rinse, dry and when still slightly damp, press with an iron, set to the silk setting.

Step 2: Preparing your design
With a pencil or vanishing marker, lightly draw your design onto the silk. The Serti Technique lends itself well to designs with enclosed areas where the color will be contained within the resist lines.

Step 3: Making a Stretching Frame
You will need a frame to stretch your silk and suspend it off the table. There are a variety of types of frames you can use, depending on the size of the piece you are painting and the materials that are available to you. Artist's canvas stretcher bars work very well. They are sold at most art supply stores in different lengths, in pairs. Old wooden picture frames also work well or you could build your own frame with wood. The wood that you use needs to be soft enough to allow push pins or 3-pronged tacks to be pushed into it. In a pinch, you could also cut out a frame from a cardboard box.

If you are painting a piece that has already-finished edges (such as a scarf), you will need to make sure that the inside measurements of the frame, are at least 2-3 inches larger (on each side) than the silk piece you will be painting so that the edges of the silk will not make contact with the stretcher bars (which would leave unwanted paint marks on the silk). You can create a 'trampoline' effect with rubber bands and safety pins or silk clips (see below).

Step 4: Stretching your silk
Stretch your silk onto your frame with stainless steel push pins or silk thumb tacks every 4-6 inches along each side. Another method is to use rubber bands and safety pins, silk clips, or Chinese Suspension Hooks: attach small safety pins, clips, or hooks connected to rubber bands to the edges of the silk, every 4–6 inches; the rubber band then goes around a push pin which pins into your frame). If need be, you can link rubber bands together for extended lengths. The advantage of the rubber bands method mentioned above is that the elasticity of the rubber bands will maintain the tension of the silk for you.


The goal when stretching your silk is to create just the right amount of tension so that the silk remains taut while you are painting but not so tight that it tears. Your piece may have a tendency to sag a bit once it becomes wet with dye or paint; you may need to adjust the pinning as you are painting.

Your frame also needs to be suspended a few inches above your table so that the silk does not have anything touching it; you can do this by placing upside down plastic cups or wood blocks underneath each corner of your frame.

Step 5: Applying your gutta or resist
(see discussion of Guttas vs. Water-soluble Resists to decide which to use)

Using even pressure and a steady hand while holding the applicator bottle vertically with the tip touching the silk, draw on your resist lines. Be sure that there are no breaks or gaps in the line (or dye or paint will escape!). Check the back side of your piece to make sure the resist has penetrated all the way through. If it hasn't, you will need to apply resist to the back side as well. (This is sometimes necessary when working on silks heavier than 12 mm. Let the resist dry (you can speed up the drying time with a blow dryer, or heat gun) before painting.


Step 6: Applying your dyes or paints
(see discussion of dyes vs. paints to decide which to use)

Dip your brush into the color and apply the dye or paint sparingly to the center of an outlined area by touching the brush to the silk. Let the paint move to the resist line – do not apply the paint too close to the resist (if water-based resist becomes too saturated the line may begin to dissolve!) If there is a gap in your resist line that you didn't notice and the dye or paint starts escaping, you can stop the movement by drying it quickly with a hair dryer and then patch up the line with gutta or resist and let dry before resuming. When painting large areas (e.g., background), work quickly, applying wet to wet to avoid unwanted lines.


Step 7: Setting the color
When you have finished applying the dye or paint to the silk yardage or scarf, it's not permanent until you "set" or "fix" the color so that in the future you can wash or dry clean the piece without all the color washing out.

The method of "setting" or "fixing" the color depends on the chemistry of the dye or paint you are using. Before purchasing any dye or paint, you should read the directions thoroughly to determine if the required procedure fits your project and situation.

Setting paints with heat (Dye-na-Flow, Seta-Silk, Silkcolor by Sennelier, Arty's Heat-Set)
Allow to dry 24 hours before heat-setting the paints with an iron, 2-3 minutes on each area of your piece, face down on your ironing board with a press cloth between the silk and your iron. You may also want a protective cloth on the ironing board as well. Work in small areas at a time, moving in a small circular motion so as not to burn the silk, but also so that each section maintains the heat for a long enough duration to actually set the paint.


Setting dyes with steam (Sennelier Tinfix Design, Pebeo Silk (Pebeo Soie), Jacquard Silk Colors (green label), Dupont French Dyes, Procion Liquid H)
Of the two methods for setting silk dyes, the steaming method produces the most brilliant colors. Some people don't want to go this route, but those who do are usually very happy with the results. Read detailed steaming instructions.

Setting dyes with chemical fixative (Tinfix fixative for Tinfix Design, Jacquard Dyeset for Jacquard Silk Colors)
If you don't want to go the steaming route, Tinfix and Jacquard have liquid fixatives for their respective dyes. They can be painted on top of the dyes, or the project can be submerged. The colors will not be as brilliant and they may not be as colorfast as they would if set by steaming. Follow the manufacturer's directions for using the chemical fixatives.

Step 8: Removing clear gutta or clear water-based resist
Once the dye or paint has been properly fixed, it's time to remove the gutta or resist. Clear gutta is removed by dry cleaning. Clear water-based resist is removed by rinsing in warm water. It comes out easily when used with iron-set paints, but some brands can be very difficult, if not impossible, to remove after steam-setting dyes. Once the resist is removed, hang dry, then iron lightly while still slightly damp. See our gutta vs. resist page for more details.

If colored guttas have been used, do not dry clean (the color will come out with the gutta)! They are meant to leave on the silk. There will be some "hand" or "feel" on the silk. Some people prefer to use the colored guttas on wall hanging pieces only, rather than on wearable art.

If colored water-based resists have been used, follow the manufacturer's instructions for heat-setting with an iron before painting on the color. See our gutta vs. resist page for details. The colored resists are meant to stay on the fabric. There wil be a "feel" on the fabric.


About Steamsetting Silk Dyes
About Steamsetting Silk Dyes

When you have finished applying the dye to the silk yardage or scarf - it's not permanent until you do something else. You have to "set" or"'fix" the color so you can wash or dry clean the piece without all the color washing out.

The method of "setting" or "fixing" the color depends on the chemistry of the dye you are using. Before purchasing any dye you should read the directions thoroughly to determine if the required proceedure fits your project and situation (time or space available, inclinations i.e. lifestyle).

DYES AND METHODS OF FIXATION

Steam fixation is essential for the last group of dyes and preferred for many others. They need to be steamed to achieve adequate color intensity and washability. The high temperature heat and pressure produced by steaming bonds dye and silk molecules together.

Best results are achieved using a professional home steamer. Dharma carries two types: the upright electric self-contained steamer and the stove top steamer. Smaller pieces can, however, be steamed successfully on the stove much like one steams vegetables.

PREPARING THE FABRIC FOR STEAMING

When steaming it is important that the fabric does not touch itself at any point. If it does, the dye will transfer from one place to another and cause smearing. Also, water from the steaming process can never be allowed to come into contact with dyed silk. This will create spots and smears and designs you may not desire. To prevent these unwanted effects the fabric must be wrapped or rolled in paper and protected from itself and condensation from the steamer.

Rolling the fabric for the electric steamer or the stove top steamer.

The silk should be rolled between sheets of newsprint or similarly absorbent material - the paper or material you use must be porous enough to allow the steam to penetrate. If you use newspaper, the ink must be completely dry, at least six weeks old.

Roll a few layers of paper onto the pole you are using. Then begin rolling the fabric onto the poll between the layers of paper while keeping it smooth to prevent wrinkles from developing. The paper should extend at least two inches beyond the silk at each end. The length of the paper you use is not important as it can be overlapped. You can roll one piece of fabric or many scarves. Continue rolling until all the fabric is on the roll. Finish by wrapping an extra two layers of paper around the fabric and secure the roll with tape. Place the roll in the steamer and you are ready to start.

Steaming Time

The length of time required to set the dyes depends on the type of dyes and the amount of fabric on the roll. Generally, steam time will range from 1 hour (after the water is boiling) to 3 hours. The larger the roll of fabric, the more time necessary, as the steam must penetrate to the center of the roll. Check the directions of the dye you are using for the correct/ appropriate steaming time and then adjust for the amount of fabric being steamed- the more fabric, the longer the time.


Building Your Own Stovetop Silk Steamer
Building Your Own Stovetop Silk Steamer

Here's a quick and easy method for steaming a small quantity of silk (2 to 4 scarves or under 2 yards of fabric). Building your own steamer is somewhat time consuming but not difficult. The object is to subject the dyed fabric to a steam filled environment for a specific period of time without water drops landing on the fabric.

  1. On a work surface lay 2-3 layers of clean, unprinted newsprint. Next, lay your dry, dyed silk on the paper with 2" allowance all around. If placing scarves side by side be sure they don't touch each other (at lease 2" apart). Then place 2-3 more sheets of paper on top of that. Start rolling into a tube. Be sure to smooth out any wrinkles as you roll (this is very important, or you may unwittingly be steaming wrinkles permanently into your silk!). You can try using a small diameter pole (broom handle) to facilitate rolling into a neat, tight roll. When completely rolled, tape everywhere you think it could come unrolled. Remove pole. Flaten the roll a bit, tuck in the opening nearest you and seal with tape, and then roll like a cinnamon roll, into a coil. Tuck in the other end and seal with tape and then secure the coil with tape or tie gently with string. The final flat roll must be small enough to fit into the pot, on top of the stand you will make below.

  2. In a large pot (a canning pot is ideal), put about 2 inches of water or whatever mixture the instructions for the dye you have used call for. (For example Tinfix requires 1 part white vinegar to 3 parts water).

  3. To keep the fabric out of the water make a stand using a tin can with both ends removed and an aluminum pie pan or wire rack on top. On top of the pie pan place a dish towel or several layers of newsprint cut into cirlces to fit. This is to absorb moisture and avoid a puddle. The aim with all of this is to set up a situation where your wrapped silk can be steamed but at no time get wet!

  4. After placing on the stand, Cover the wrapped coil with 4-5 more layers of newsprint circles. Place a piece of aluminum foil over the coil and lightly crimp it around the edges of the pie pan. The foil will protect your piece from any condensation that may collect on the inside of the lid.

  5. To pad the inside of the lid, cut a stack (3/8-1/2") of lid-size circles from newspaper. Place the paper on a thick cotton towel and the lid on top of that. Gather up the sides of the towel and fasten securely over the top of the lid with clothes pin or safety pins. Place the towel-covered lid on the pot making sure that no part of the towel is hanging down in danger of being near the flame or heat from the burner. Weight the top of the lid with something heavy to build pressure inside. (Careful this is not intended to be a bomb. The steam needs to escape or it will explode. A brick or two or an upsidedown heavy pot will do just fine). Stay near the pot during the steaming process so you can ensure that all is safe!

  6. Begin heating the water to a boil, then turn heat down to an even, constant simmer. The amount of time needed to steam-fix the dyes varies depending on the type and amount of dye used, the weight of the fabric, and the amount of yardage. This can be anywhere from 20 minutes to 3 hours. Follow the dye manufacturer's suggestions. Try to have enough water so that you don't need to add any along the way, but if it is necessary, do so with boiling water so you don't loose as much time and temperature.

  7. After steaming, remove and unwrap the roll carefully—it will be hot to the touch. Hang fabrics so that the fabrics don't touch each other, wait 24 hours, then wash in synthrapol. Blot with a clean towel, and iron dry with a cool iron.

Some notes:

  • Wrinkles will set when steamed. (Actually that is how designer crinkle-silk is made.) So be careful to keep your silk smooth and flat while you roll it.

  • Condensation in the steamer creates drips of water that can water spot your work if you you don't carefully protect it.

  • Gutta may stick to the newsprint, but the bits of paper that stick to the clear gutta will be removed with the gutta during dry cleaning.

Other Techniques
Page 1 Page 2
Related Projects
Salted Silk Scarf Project
Step by step tutorial for creating a beautiful silk scarf with Tinfix Design Silk Colors and Jacquard Silk Salt.

Product Reviews
Average Rating:  5.00 (2 reviews)
Product Rating:
Reviewed: Wed Apr 2 13:46:27 2008
Product Review:
Fabulous dye!! Beautiful colors, and so many colors too. I've been using Tinfix for years and still love it. As a profes