The beginner method: Batik dyeing by setting:


Posted July 19, 2019 by markwahlbarg

For stripes across the textile, wrap the textile-like a sausage and then tie it tightly in the middle, for example. For several stripes, simply tie the fabric several times.

 
Mysterious Patterns, Circles, Lines, Figures: If you are familiar with the technique of batik dyeing, you will get a garment that can hardly be more individualized and unique. So unique that you never know exactly what to expect after batik dyeing. Laundry on demand service explains step by step both the batik techniques for beginners and advanced.

These fabrics are suitable for batik dyeing:

Whether the layman's method for beginners or the traditional Indonesian technique for advanced: The principle of dyeing batik is always the same. The fabric is bound or covered in some places so that these spots do not come into contact with the dye during dyeing. As a result, lighter areas in the fabric remain in fascinating patterns.

The most suitable for batiks are natural fabrics such as cotton, linen, silk, wool or viscose. But mixed fabrics made of these fibers are also possible, but the proportion of synthetic materials such as polyamide, polyacrylic or polyester should not exceed 50 percent.

You can bathe T-shirts as well as sweaters, but also towels, pillows, bed linen - your creativity knows no bounds. It is important that you dye light clothes darker. Conversely, coloring darker textiles in lighter shades is not possible.

Depending on the effects you want to achieve, you bind the fabric in different ways:

For stripes across the textile, wrap the textile-like a sausage and then tie it tightly in the middle, for example. For several stripes, simply tie the fabric several times.

Alternatively, you can knot the fabric so that the original color remains at the node's location. For longitudinal strips, roll the textile together from bottom to top, for horizontal strips from one long side to the other. For thicker stripes, make a thicker - or multiple - knot or wrap the string around the fabric several times, leaving a correspondingly larger area protected from the dye.

As suggested by laundry on demand service, for circles, place the textile in front of you and pull up a corner of the fabric with your fingers. Tie this tip firmly with the help of a string or a rubber band.

At the tied place, a circle is created when dyeing, again, the wider the setting, the thicker the circle. If you continue to pull the tied tip upwards and set it for a second or third time, creating a kind of multi-stringed sausage, you will later have several concentric circles nestling into each other.
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Issued By markwahlbarg
Country United States
Categories Business
Last Updated July 19, 2019