Depending on the dye, you can get cloth or hair dye at just about any grocery store. Other dyes you might get at an arts and crafts store.
wool dyed reddish-purple
every cloth is made of a type of string, like cotton, wool, etc. they get dyed with colors. !
They usually wore clothes made of deerskin covered withe dyed porqupine quills. They usually had fringe under the arms.
I can't think of any reason that you shouldn't
You dye clothes in a washing machine by buying the packets of dye at a store and then you pour it in and then you let it set and voila it is dyed after you tale it out and dry it.
It depends what the logo is made of. If it's embroidered on or dyed, then the answer is no. If it's an iron-on type, then it shouldn't bleed or change colors.
Dyed is a verb (past tense of dye) and an adjective (dyed hair).
Do you mean "dyed" or "died? Ie: She dyed her hair yesterday. OR... She died yesterday.
Dyed jade will not have the same esoteric qualities as jade that has not been dyed. If it is looked at through a Chelsea filter, dyed jade will have a red coloring to it.
most clothing was not dyed and left unbleached so it was a cream or dirty white colour. If you were prosperous enough your clothing was bleached white. Dyeing linen was difficult so coloured clothes were expensive and rare.
First the cotton gets picked afterwards it gets cleaned and also get dyed, or whitened, then spun into thin threads. Then the threads gets woven into cloth. After the cloth gets cut into pieces and stitched together as clothes.
Deer Skin! with several decorations such as porcupine quills and dyed hair they also used calico and European designs after around 1700's