Sew Mama Sew! Logo Fabulous Fabric and Patterns

Browse our shop for modern cotton fabric and hip new sewing patterns from indie designers. Visit our blog for sewing tutorials, project ideas and giveaways. Join the supportive sewing community in our forum to share your skills and learn something new.

Fabric Dying Materials Atlanta GA

This page provides useful content and local businesses that give access to Fabric Dying Materials in Atlanta, GA. You will find helpful, informative articles about Fabric Dying Materials, including "Primary Tints: A Beginning Fabric Dyeing Tutorial from Candied Fabrics". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Atlanta, GA that will answer all of your questions about Fabric Dying Materials.

ABC Consignment Store LLC
770 837 2784
927 Main St. ste B
Stone Mountain, GA
Digital Arts Studio
(404) 352-9779
1082 Huff Rd Nw Ste B
Atlanta, GA
Master Framing & Conservation Studio
(404) 982-0168
2227 Faulkner Rd Ne
Atlanta, GA
Pearl Artist & Craft Supply Corp
(404) 233-9400
3756 Roswell Rd
Atlanta, GA
Global Web Trading
(770) 454-8801
3666 N Peachtree Rd
Atlanta, GA
Bird of Paradise Designs
(970) 690-0772Specialties Antiques
292 Grand Manor Drive
Marietta, GA
Artlite Retail Store
(404) 924-8820
2531 Piedmont Rd Ne
Atlanta, GA
Binders Art Supply And Frames
(404) 237-6331
3330 Piedmont Rd Ne Ste 18
Atlanta, GA
Tuxedo Frame Gallery
(404) 261-5570
3800 Roswell Rd
Atlanta, GA
Pif Art Group
(404) 472-0602
75 Mendel Dr Sw Ste D
Atlanta, GA

Primary Tints: A Beginning Fabric Dyeing Tutorial from Candied Fabrics

Primary Tints: A Beginning Fabric Dyeing Tutorial from Candied Fabrics

We have a new line of 100% Organic Cotton Solids from Robert Kaufman in the shop; it’s prepared-for-dyeing (PFD) and includes a variety of weights and weaves, from twill and canvas to voile and poplin. Candy from Candied Fabrics recently included our new fabrics in her Organic Prepared for Dying (PFD) Fabric Test to see how they react to dye and take on color. Candy’s an expert at dyeing fabrics, with over 13 years of experience and a beautiful, extensive collection of art she creates with the fabric she dyes. We asked Candy to give us some dyeing basics so you can take the 100% Organic Cotton Solids and create your own perfect fabrics. She’s here today with her beginning fabric dyeing tutorial on primary tints. (Wouldn’t this be perfect with Malka’s Fish Baby Log Cabin pattern ?– You could dye your own fabrics and create an absolutely gorgeous quilt.)

Candy is having a giveaway on her blog to celebrate the start her fifth year of business as an artist working exclusively with her own hand dyed fabrics. Be sure to stop by and enter! We hope you’re inspired by today’s tutorial to create your own dyed fabrics…

Have you ever envied all the luscious colors and textures artists get when they dye their own fabric? Well envy no more– You should try your hand at dyeing! This introduction to dyeing will show you how to create tints of the three primary colors: fuscia, yellow and turquoise. Not only is this an easy way to get started dyeing, you’ll be creating lots of different values of three hues, which come in handy when you’re trying to create movement and contrast in whatever you’re creating.

What you’ll need to dye all 3 Gradations:

  • 4.5 yards PFD Fabric, cut into “fat quarters” (Sew,Mama,Sew! has a nice selection of Organic PFD Fabric , the poplin would be a great fabric to start with, not too thin, not too thick, with a nice high thread count.)
  • ½ cup Soda Ash (Sodium Carbonate; It’s often called “pH Up” and is available in the pool supply aisle of big box stores, your local pool supply store or at online dye suppliers, where it may be called Dye Activator… Three names, same chemical!)
  • Three primary colors of Procion MX Fiber Reactive Dyes. Available from:
    - Dharma Trading for West coast folk
    - PROchem for East coast folk
    - These dyes may also be available locally at craft supply stores, but these do have a shelf life and need to be stored properly (heat and moisture destroy their reactivity) so “buyer beware.”
    - For this tutorial I used these dyes:

  • 18 small-ish plastic containers (I used 3-cup cheap generic “Tupperware” and recycled yogurt tubs)
  • 1 larger bucket
  • 3 plastic cups and spoons
  • 3 containers for dye (I use recycled water bottles with “sports squirter tops”)
  • 1 measuring cup you’ll no longer use for food
  • A small graduated cylinder, syringe or a teaspoo...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Sew,Mama,Sew!