Deliver vibrant color to almost any type of fabric or fabric blend, including cotton, linen, silk, wool, rayon, ramie or nylon. This liquid dye can even color wood, wicker, paper and cork Perfect for rejuvenating faded clothing, changing the color of apparel, shoes or accessories, coordinating home décor, hiding laundry accidents and so much more Get creative and create something unique with an easy dye technique, like an ombré, dip dyed, marbled, shibori or tie-dye pattern With 500+ color recipes available on Rit’s website, it is almost certain you’ll find the right color for your needs If dyeing fabric with 35% or more polyester, acrylic or acetate, use Rit DyeMore For Synthetics instead
Manufacturer | - |
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Brand | Rit |
Item model number | 8-36 |
Color | Blue |
Weight | - |
Height | - |
Depth | - |
Product Id | 314162 |
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User Reviews and Ratings | 4.1 (103 ratings) 4.1 out of 5 stars |
UPC | 885967883602 |
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Rit, All Purpose Liquid Dye, Denim Blue, 8 fl oz
Reviews: 103
Ratings:
(103)
Price:
$6.19
on
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103 | (4.1) |
$6.19
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I purchased the lemon yellow dye to match the kids' leggings with their Woodstock costumes for a Charlie Brown play. They turned out perfectly!
Worked great on a pair of old jeans and a white tshirt. Super vibrant. Easy to use. Doesn't bleed or fade if instructions are followed. Shirt soaked up the dye like a sponge almost instantly. Left jeans in dye bath over night and they came out with a bright green tint. Not truly green, but that's the nature of the material. Still looked great for an event. The pictures don't do the color of the jeans justice. Also note that they are old jeans, medium wash. I believe the wear and tear of the material helped with the absorption of the dye. If I had used a new pair as originally planned, I don't think there would have been any absorption. RIT also makes dye for synthetic materials and since my jeans were stretchy, maybe that would have provided a more saturated effect. Either way, I'm still learning but I'm really happy with these results.
I got one dye to dye one pair of jeans. I followed the directions and they turned out nice. I had bought a 2 gallon metal bucket to dye these and tried doing this with the bucket in the kitchen sink. I'd recommend getting a larger bucket then what I got and not doing it in the sink. Having to keep stirring it continuously has some of the dye water coming out of the bucket and had me worried it'd dye my sink. After about 15 minutes of worrying I decided to just take the bucket outside and stir it in my backyard.
This dye is reasonably priced and does the job well. They have a video for instructions that really helps. I'm very pleased with the outcome. Made my project fun and successful.
I needed to sue items red, yellow, and white. So I tried several of these Rit colors. I know Rit had a dark red. Perhaps it was the Scarlet Red? Anyway, these liquid Rit bottles do not work as well, in my opinion, as the powdered ones in the box. And maybe I just used too much water. Which once I did them again I used half of the water per the instructions. To me the second and third tries worked better. Of course, at this point I have spent like $50 to turn my old white dresses different colors. So I may be a little salty here. Plus Walmarts price (I took 1 Star off due to the price) in my area is more than some other grocery stores. But the Yellow dye's are hard to find. Not to mention I come to Walmart almost everyday.
I used this in my washer with a blanket I wanted to be pink. My washer doesn't have a pre soak cycle so I mixed the dye in with a gallon of water poured straight on to the blanket in the washer and let it just soak a while (the amount lost on the bottle) in the machine before running. Then I just ran the washer no rinsing. I threw some rags in each load, rags that it didn't matter if they stained, I washed the blanket until the rags new rags stopped turning pink. Dry and done.
I needed to dye items red, yellow, and white. So I tried several of these Rit colors. I know Rit had a Yellow sue. I found dandelion and lemon yellow. This Lemon Yellow is my favorite but I now can't find it in store. I ordered some but one of the bottles was not Lemon Yellow, instead they gave me Dandelion. I used it not paying attention and I got three dandelion dresses. And one Lemon Yellow jacket because I started with the jacket first. Anyway, these liquid Rit bottles do not work as well, in my opinion, as the powdered ones in the box. And maybe I just used too much water. Which once I did them again I used half of the water per the instructions. To me the second and third tries worked better. Of course, at this point I have spent like $50 to turn my old white dresses, a jacket, and a duster different colors. So I may be a little salty here. Plus Walmarts price (I took 1 Star off due to the price) in my area is more than some other grocery stores. But the Yellow dye's are hard to find. Not to mention I come to Walmart almost everyday.
The title pretty much says it all, this is blue dye. In the picture, the one all the way to the left is the “dark green”. The middle glass has one to one ratio between dark green, and golden yellow, and the one on the right is 1 part dark green, with 2 parts golden yellow.
Cotton shoelaces were white. Tried to use Rit black to dye them black and now they're light gray. Yes I followed the instructions.
I ordered this product in black and received the graphite color instead