it was made from porn
Tie dye originates from Africa and Asia. It was brought to the western world in the 60's during the flower revolution!
Tie dye came to the United States in the 1960's from Japan.
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.
No. I've had a couple of tie-dye shirts for several years, and they never faded after not ironing them (I never ironed them, and I used cheap tie-dye spray from my local craft store.)
Charles E. Pellow invented tie dye for kids, tweens, and teens and all other ages for that matter.
Tie dye originates from Africa and Asia. It was brought to the western world in the 60's during the flower revolution!
Tie dye came to the United States in the 1960's from Japan.
japan
It originated in California in the 1960's - the 'hippy' era.
in china and japan and india and america
2000 years ago, Chinese used the tie-dye method in the Tang dynasty. Japan still keep tie-dye work that the Tang dynasty made in one of their many palaces. but it's no longer nationally precious.
Tie-dye originated in ancient times, with its earliest forms traced back to regions in Asia, Africa, and South America. Techniques similar to tie-dye have been found in countries like Japan, India, and Peru, where textiles were decorated using resist dyeing methods. The practice gained popularity in the United States during the 1960s counterculture movement, becoming a symbol of peace and creativity.
NO WAY! I love tie dye!
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.
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.
Japanese Shibori is an influence on modern tie dye designs.
countries that mostly used tie dye