Not technically. It's a mix of colors.
No tie dye is a color combination like hippie colors
tie dye. tie-dye, man, tie-dye it's groovy That would be tie-dye. Bits of fabric are bunched together, secured with rubber bands and dipped into various colors of dye to create the color effects.
you use the color of marker that you want the tie dye silly bandz get one silly bandz and color it and let it dry completely
Not easily, you could take bleach to get the color to white.
Tie-dye refers to a popular pattern of swirling, vibrant color that is typically seen on items of clothing. The modern version of tie-dye became popular in the late 1960s.
no because they didnt have the "technology" (if you may) to be able to tye dye and to have the color to stay locked in their clothes.
NO WAY! I love tie dye!
Pick out a shade of the blue that is in the tie die for your matching color. You could also use navy, or a chambray, but this would depend on the lightness or darkness of the blues in the tie die.
Sure, you can tie dye just about any fabric. Of course, the blue color already in the sheets would give you a different look than if you used white sheets.
For a colorfast tie dye a fiber reactive dye is needed such as Procion Dye from the Dharma Trading Company. Rit dye can be used but is not fiber reactive and not colorfast and the tie dye will fade colors after each wash.
countries that mostly used tie dye
Japanese Shibori is an influence on modern tie dye designs.