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What do you call dye that uses sunlight to develop photos on fabric? Frakkin’ amazing, that’s what. You could also call it our Photo Fabric Dye Kit! A kit of red, orange, and blue gives you enough dye to create some serious awesomosity. It’s a little like making cyanotype sun prints, only in a jillion different colors. The Photo Fabric Dye Kit BONUS!: We’ve been playing around with this amazing stuff. Here’s what we learned! How to: Make Sun Prints on Fabric with the Kit
The How & What of Photo Fabric Dye
You can mix different colors of dye to make new shades, and it works on cotton, silk, or even wood. What You’ll Need
Step 1: Mixing colors
A few ideas:
Step 2: Painting the dye on
Slip something underneath to keep the dye from getting everywhere, like a sheet of wax paper or a spare magazine. For your first exposure, paint an area just big enough for your negative. Later on, when you see what exposures or images work best, try painting all of a small object like a coin purse or handkerchief. Step 3: Exposure!
Arrange your negative on top of the dye area. Keep it in a plastic sleeve to keep it clean, or put a layer of Saran Wrap between the negative and the wet dye. You can put the glass from a picture frame on top to keep the negative flat in place. This will keep the image sharp–if the negative curls you’ll get soft focus in places. Take the project out into the sunlight and let it sit while the dye develops. It should be about 8 minutes in bright sun, 16 minutes on cloudy days. Step 4: Time to wash
Use the strongest detergent you have and scrub the fabric really hard. You need to get all the unexposed dye out or it will continue to darken. That’s it! Just let your project dry, and it’s done! How to Make Photograms
You can make silhouettes by printing photos on heavy paper and cutting out the shape with an x-acto knife. We like using pictures of animals for this sort of thing, or you could try taking profile shots of your friends, just like old-fashioned silhouette portraits! *That’s how Anna Atkins, the first female photographer, made her images. Exposing your photograms
You can also use interestingly shaped objects like plants, feathers, or even lace. Play around, and let us know what you come up with! How to Make Humongous Negatives
You can either print on inkjet-compatible transparency sheets or take the file to Kinko’s to have it printed. Just choose a black-and-white digital image, bump up the contrast like crazy, invert the image to make it a negative and size the document to the dimensions you want for your project. More ideas![]()
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