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1. Place a pre-washed, still damp (the fabric should not be dripping wet, but
evenly damp as if it came directly out of the washing machine), t-shirt flat on
a smoothed plastic drop cloth.
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2. Pick a spot on the shirt and pinch some fabric to place between your
fingers. Some use a fork in place of your hands but that has been known to tear
the fabric if you are not careful.
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3. Twist your fingers to begin the spiral twirl and begin wrapping the fabric
around your pinch. Continue twisting until it resembles the shape of a cinnamon
roll.
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4. Rubber bands (or tied string) is used to hold the fabric together. Slide the
rubber bands under and over the spiral so that the fabric will hold its shape
during the dyeing process.
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5. Wear your dust mask and dissolve 1 cup (8 oz.) of Soda Ash Fixer per gallon
of warm water. Soak the tied garments about 5-15 minutes (until saturated).
Reuse solution until gone. Squeeze out excess so garment is just damp, not
dripping.
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6. Using your dust mask and gloves, combine water with all chemicals except
dye. Add liquid to dye gradually, pasting up to avoid lumps. Apply the dye to your shirt using
squeeze bottles, paint brushes, sponges, etc., as many colors as you want.
Easiest to use a funnel to pour dissolved dye into squeeze bottles.
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7. Put fabric (still tied) in a plastic bag (the idea is to keep it wet and
chemically active - any method of keeping it wet is O.K.) and let sit for at
least 4 hours but preferably 24 hours to "cure". Shorter times work better in
summer, and longer times are needed when it is cold.
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8. Remove from bag and while still tied, rinse off the excess dye under cold
running water (faucet, hose or shower), then rinse in warmer water while you
untie and after garments are untied, until water runs fairly clear. Have your
washing machine pre-filled with hot water with Synthrapol and throw in the
clothing as soon as it is rinsed, running it through a full cycle.
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