Monday, November 23, 2015

Soy wax

A lot of techniques which you use with regular dyeing, can also be used with snow and ice dyeing. In today's blogpost I will show you an example of using soy wax resist. Using an old brush I applied soy wax to the fabric.



I placed the fabric flat on a raised platform in a container. Put snow on top of it and sprinkled soda ash powder together with different dye powders on it. For this one I used Cardinal Red, Gunmetal Gray and Caribbean Blue. Left it like that till the next day. This is how the fabric looked after the snow had melted:


After rinsing, washing and ironing the fabric looks like this:


Keep in mind that for ironing soy wax out of fabric you need lots and lots of old newspapers.

4 comments:

  1. I don't iron soy wax to remove it. I use soap and hot water. That's why it's better to use than beeswax or paraffin.

    Diane

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  2. Clever idea. I've never seen soy wax resist used with snow dyes before. Great results

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  3. Another alternative would be to pre-soda soak the fabric, let it line dry, then apply the wax so you wouldn't have to sprinkle it over the snow. I do that for my Autumn Leaves shirts, then do a quick dip in the solution to moisten the shirt before applying my dye bath. I will have to definitely try the snow dye with soy wax as soon as we have enough snow to scoop up!

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  4. The reason I use soy wax is because it can be washed out instead of ironed out. In the last issue of Quilting Arts I wrote an article on using resists including soy wax with ice dyeing. Love the results. I have a blog post tutorial on soy and ice dyeing. You can check it out here if interested: http://www.bloombakecreate.com/2015/02/soy-wax-ice-dyeing/

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