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Originally Posted By TheMountaineer:
Thanks for putting in all this work, raf. Have you tried to go back over something you've already dyed green with taupe or some other dye to try to make it brown? I'm wondering if you could get it the shade of green you like then kind of do a tie-dye with brown to get a woodland-like camo... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By TheMountaineer:
Thanks for putting in all this work, raf. Have you tried to go back over something you've already dyed green with taupe or some other dye to try to make it brown? I'm wondering if you could get it the shade of green you like then kind of do a tie-dye with brown to get a woodland-like camo... If you want to go that route, then applying the desired paint (in the form of a dusting of spray paint) is probably the route to go..Never tried to apply a radically different color of dye over a base color. I believe there might be problems with the second application running and thus diluting before much effect could take place. (Also just out of curiosity, do you actually use all these pouches or just use them as cheap sacrificial material to experiment on?) I'll probably have quite a sale some day. The various pix shown in this thread are just dying projects; A very small fraction of what I currently have. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Have you tried dyeing any DCU items with the RIT green apple or dark green? I have a desert DPM smock that I want to dye. Hoping for a greenish color. Thanks!
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Originally Posted By cap6888:
Have you tried dyeing any DCU items with the RIT green apple or dark green? I have a desert DPM smock that I want to dye. Hoping for a greenish color. Thanks! View Quote Examples of nylon gear shown in above pix, I think it was an e-tool carrier and a radio pouch. I have limited experience with dyeing cotton or nylon/cotton blend cloth, but I imagine you could get a greenish color easily enough on desert DPM stuff. I dyed UCP ACUs to good effect with Apple Green, but i don't necessarily suggest that color for you, since I don't know what shade you want, and more importantly, how the cloth will take the dye. Getting the right shade of green is the trick, and I can't help you there. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf:
If you want to go that route, then applying the desired paint (in the form of a dusting of spray paint) is probably the route to go..Never tried to apply a radically different color of dye over a base color. I believe there might be problems with the second application running and thus diluting before much effect could take place. I'll probably have quite a sale some day. The various pix shown in this thread are just dying projects; A very small fraction of what I currently have. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By raf:
Originally Posted By TheMountaineer:
Thanks for putting in all this work, raf. Have you tried to go back over something you've already dyed green with taupe or some other dye to try to make it brown? I'm wondering if you could get it the shade of green you like then kind of do a tie-dye with brown to get a woodland-like camo... If you want to go that route, then applying the desired paint (in the form of a dusting of spray paint) is probably the route to go..Never tried to apply a radically different color of dye over a base color. I believe there might be problems with the second application running and thus diluting before much effect could take place. (Also just out of curiosity, do you actually use all these pouches or just use them as cheap sacrificial material to experiment on?) I'll probably have quite a sale some day. The various pix shown in this thread are just dying projects; A very small fraction of what I currently have. Ahhh, I didn't think about the effects of going back over something washing out the original dye job. I have no experience with Rit Dye... |
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Tagged
Going to attempt to dye a khaki tan M4 mag pouch to coyote brown. |
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Terminally infected with both Black Rifle Disease and Edged Tool Syndrome at the same time!
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I think you hit a home run with that rack and the zipper TT pouches as that is the best green I have seen anywhere. To my eye the colors look very similar to Cadpat.
Thanks for doing all the research for the rest of us raf. I have a roll of Air Force tigerstripe material that I will try this out on. I thought I could make some cool clothing items from it after a proper dye job. |
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Originally Posted By RifleCal30m1n00b:
I'm hoping to use a little dye bath to get the contrast down a bit. They don't have to match, nor be perfect, but I'd like to think they didn't vary this wildly among supposedly identical-pattern garments. I happen to have some Rit Taupe (liquid) and some Tan (powder) that I'm debating using on the lighter garments to try and get them a little more subdued-brownish like the hat. I guess I'm kinda hoping for confirmation or negation of the idea, or a better suggestion from someone who actually knows what he's doing. Oh, and so far as I know they're all cotton fabric, so that shouldn't be a problem. View Quote I think I'd go with the Tan powder first. I think it will dye lighter than the Taupe. Then if you decide it's not what you want you can always go darker with the Taupe. |
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Originally Posted By RifleCal30m1n00b:
OK, I don't want to clutter up the forum, but I'm not sure this is quite the right place. But I'm a little short on ideas here. I have this repro tiger-stripe clothing: <a href="http://s104.photobucket.com/user/Cal30M1Guy/media/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020216.jpg.html" target="_blank">http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m186/Cal30M1Guy/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020216.jpg</a> Pretty obviously, the boonie hat (at right, atop the M1956 canteen cover) is a much more brownish overall shade than the trousers on the left. Here's an attempt to get it in better light: <a href="http://s104.photobucket.com/user/Cal30M1Guy/media/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020040.jpg.html" target="_blank">http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m186/Cal30M1Guy/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020040.jpg</a> (as an aside, I can see now what raf means when he describes colors as looking different in person than in photos--the difference is much more stark to my eye than my potato-cam phone ) I'm hoping to use a little dye bath to get the contrast down a bit. They don't have to match, nor be perfect, but I'd like to think they didn't vary this wildly among supposedly identical-pattern garments. I happen to have some Rit Taupe (liquid) and some Tan (powder) that I'm debating using on the lighter garments to try and get them a little more subdued-brownish like the hat. I guess I'm kinda hoping for confirmation or negation of the idea, or a better suggestion from someone who actually knows what he's doing. Oh, and so far as I know they're all cotton fabric, so that shouldn't be a problem. View Quote I don't think I would do anything. There are often variations in shading in different lots of camo material. If a guy in Vietnam had to replace a part of his tigerstripes, it would often be of a slightly different shade. But YMMV. If you dye the tiger stripes, the first thing to accept the tan will be the lightest areas, which will accept more of the color than the darker areas. In short, they will look a lot different than they now do. that might be what you want, but just saying. I would definitely caution against using Rit Tan or any of the Rit Browns on nylon field gear, because of the reddish tint that results. OK if you're going to Mars, but not so good anywhere else. I use Taupe exclusively on nylon field gear. You are dyeing cotton cloth, and that is a different proposition; perhaps the red will not come through as much as it most definitely does on pure nylon stuff. FWIW, the very hot water used in the dyeing process might shrink the material. In short, do nothing. The variation of the items is authentic, if that matters to you. If you insist on dyeing the lighter item (and nothing wrong with that), I suggest you find out the suggested amount of dye for the weight of the fabric, and cut it in half. I'd use Rit Taupe, since you want to make the white areas more brown. Be advised that it's hard to judge when cotton stuff is done dyeing to a particular shade, because the material gets a lot darker when wet. So, as a preliminary, I would get the material soaked, and take some pix of it so that you can remember how dark it gets when wet with straight water only. That might help you guesstimate when to yank it out of the dye solution. I don't think you'll need to leave it in the dye bath very long, so practice immersing it, turning it over a few times, and then pulling it out quickly. do this prep work before you dye it. As I say, I am NO expert on dyeing cotton material, so do some reading at the Rit site, and practice. Good luck, and report back. I find pix taken in the shade, with no flash usually come out fairly normal color-wise. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf:
I don't think I would do anything. There are often variations in shading in different lots of camo material. If a guy in Vietnam had to replace a part of his tigerstripes, it would often be of a slightly different shade. But YMMV. If you dye the tiger stripes, the first thing to accept the tan will be the lightest areas, which will accept more of the color than the darker areas. In short, they will look a lot different than they now do. that might be what you want, but just saying. I would definitely caution against using Rit Tan or any of the Rit Browns on nylon field gear, because of the reddish tint that results. OK if you're going to Mars, but not so good anywhere else. I use Taupe exclusively on nylon field gear. You are dyeing cotton cloth, and that is a different proposition; perhaps the red will not come through as much as it most definitely does on pure nylon stuff. FWIW, the very hot water used in the dyeing process might shrink the material. In short, do nothing. The variation of the items is authentic, if that matters to you. If you insist on dyeing the lighter item (and nothing wrong with that), I suggest you find out the suggested amount of dye for the weight of the fabric, and cut it in half. I'd use Rit Taupe, since you want to make the white areas more brown. Be advised that it's hard to judge when cotton stuff is done dyeing to a particular shade, because the material gets a lot darker when wet. So, as a preliminary, I would get the material soaked, and take some pix of it so that you can remember how dark it gets when wet with straight water only. That might help you guesstimate when to yank it out of the dye solution. I don't think you'll need to leave it in the dye bath very long, so practice immersing it, turning it over a few times, and then pulling it out quickly. do this prep work before you dye it. As I say, I am NO expert on dyeing cotton material, so do some reading at the Rit site, and practice. Good luck, and report back. I find pix taken in the shade, with no flash usually come out fairly normal color-wise. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By raf:
Originally Posted By RifleCal30m1n00b:
OK, I don't want to clutter up the forum, but I'm not sure this is quite the right place. But I'm a little short on ideas here. I have this repro tiger-stripe clothing: <a href="http://s104.photobucket.com/user/Cal30M1Guy/media/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020216.jpg.html" target="_blank">http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m186/Cal30M1Guy/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020216.jpg</a> Pretty obviously, the boonie hat (at right, atop the M1956 canteen cover) is a much more brownish overall shade than the trousers on the left. Here's an attempt to get it in better light: <a href="http://s104.photobucket.com/user/Cal30M1Guy/media/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020040.jpg.html" target="_blank">http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m186/Cal30M1Guy/Gear%20et%20cetera/2014-08-29020040.jpg</a> (as an aside, I can see now what raf means when he describes colors as looking different in person than in photos--the difference is much more stark to my eye than my potato-cam phone ) I'm hoping to use a little dye bath to get the contrast down a bit. They don't have to match, nor be perfect, but I'd like to think they didn't vary this wildly among supposedly identical-pattern garments. I happen to have some Rit Taupe (liquid) and some Tan (powder) that I'm debating using on the lighter garments to try and get them a little more subdued-brownish like the hat. I guess I'm kinda hoping for confirmation or negation of the idea, or a better suggestion from someone who actually knows what he's doing. Oh, and so far as I know they're all cotton fabric, so that shouldn't be a problem. I don't think I would do anything. There are often variations in shading in different lots of camo material. If a guy in Vietnam had to replace a part of his tigerstripes, it would often be of a slightly different shade. But YMMV. If you dye the tiger stripes, the first thing to accept the tan will be the lightest areas, which will accept more of the color than the darker areas. In short, they will look a lot different than they now do. that might be what you want, but just saying. I would definitely caution against using Rit Tan or any of the Rit Browns on nylon field gear, because of the reddish tint that results. OK if you're going to Mars, but not so good anywhere else. I use Taupe exclusively on nylon field gear. You are dyeing cotton cloth, and that is a different proposition; perhaps the red will not come through as much as it most definitely does on pure nylon stuff. FWIW, the very hot water used in the dyeing process might shrink the material. In short, do nothing. The variation of the items is authentic, if that matters to you. If you insist on dyeing the lighter item (and nothing wrong with that), I suggest you find out the suggested amount of dye for the weight of the fabric, and cut it in half. I'd use Rit Taupe, since you want to make the white areas more brown. Be advised that it's hard to judge when cotton stuff is done dyeing to a particular shade, because the material gets a lot darker when wet. So, as a preliminary, I would get the material soaked, and take some pix of it so that you can remember how dark it gets when wet with straight water only. That might help you guesstimate when to yank it out of the dye solution. I don't think you'll need to leave it in the dye bath very long, so practice immersing it, turning it over a few times, and then pulling it out quickly. do this prep work before you dye it. As I say, I am NO expert on dyeing cotton material, so do some reading at the Rit site, and practice. Good luck, and report back. I find pix taken in the shade, with no flash usually come out fairly normal color-wise. Yes, the possibility of things coming out with a reddish tinge did worry me. Perhaps I'll try the diluted Taupe. That was one of my first thoughts. And I hadn't even thought of wetting everything first to set a baseline. Thanks much for all the input. ETA: And the doing-nothing definitely appeals to one side of me! |
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My first attempt at making USMC Coyote brown using Rit dye today ended up a dismal failure.
I went to the Rit web site and looked through their archive of color formulas here: https://www.ritstudio.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/ColorRit_FINAL.pdf I went through all of the colors with a few pieces of Eagle coyote gear in hand and found what to my eyes looked like the perfect color match for coyote. It is on page 29 of the archive color pdf and is the last one in the fourth row titled Yellow 3 #359 The formula is 1tbsp Kelly Green, 1 tsp Cocoa brown, and 1 cup water. I mixed up the 3 to 1 ratio of Kelly Green to Cocoa brown with 1 cup of vinegar and approx. 3 gallons of water in a large stockpot, and the result was.......... the most god-awful royal purple you could ever imagine! I am normally pretty impatient, but today, the gear gods smiled on me and gave me a little extra patience. I was inspired to use cotton cleaning patches as swatch samples to test my color, so no molle gear was harmed during this fabulously colorful clusterfuck. I tried mixing in more green and adding more water to dilute the dye, but I still got purple. Luckily I didn't spill any in the wife's kitchen or manage to turn the dog or myself purple in the process, so I am just out $10 bucks and two hours of my long weekend. Using rit dye to get coyote brown is not as simple as I thought it was going to be. |
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Terminally infected with both Black Rifle Disease and Edged Tool Syndrome at the same time!
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
My first attempt at making USMC Coyote brown using Rit dye today ended up a dismal failure. I went to the Rit web site and looked through their archive of color formulas here: https://www.ritstudio.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/ColorRit_FINAL.pdf I went through all of the colors with a few pieces of Eagle coyote gear in hand and found what to my eyes looked like the perfect color match for coyote. It is on page 29 of the archive color pdf and is the last one in the fourth row titled Yellow 3 #359 The formula is 1tbsp Kelly Green, 1 tsp Cocoa brown, and 1 cup water. I mixed up the 3 to 1 ratio of Kelly Green to Cocoa brown with 1 cup of vinegar and approx. 3 gallons of water in a large stockpot, and the result was.......... the most god-awful royal purple you could ever imagine! I am normally pretty impatient, but today, the gear gods smiled on me and gave me a little extra patience. I was inspired to use cotton cleaning patches as swatch samples to test my color, so no molle gear was harmed during this fabulously colorful clusterfuck. I tried mixing in more green and adding more water to dilute the dye, but I still got purple. Luckily I didn't spill any in the wife's kitchen or manage to turn the dog or myself purple in the process, so I am just out $10 bucks and two hours of my long weekend. Using rit dye to get coyote brown is not as simple as I thought it was going to be. View Quote That color formula was almost certainly intended for use on white, cotton fabric. No doubt it will work well in that application. Your cotton gun patches are no doubt a different sort of "Cotton" than the usual clothing material However, we are dyeing nylon, which takes the dye differently, and nylon which already has a camo pattern and/or different base color to boot. The cocoa brown dye is the most likely culprit here. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd: My first attempt at making USMC Coyote brown using Rit dye today ended up a dismal failure.
I went to the Rit web site and looked through their archive of color formulas here: https://www.ritstudio.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/ColorRit_FINAL.pdf I went through all of the colors with a few pieces of Eagle coyote gear in hand and found what to my eyes looked like the perfect color match for coyote. It is on page 29 of the archive color pdf and is the last one in the fourth row titled Yellow 3 #359 The formula is 1tbsp Kelly Green, 1 tsp Cocoa brown, and 1 cup water. I mixed up the 3 to 1 ratio of Kelly Green to Cocoa brown with 1 cup of vinegar and approx. 3 gallons of water in a large stockpot, and the result was.......... the most god-awful royal purple you could ever imagine! I am normally pretty impatient, but today, the gear gods smiled on me and gave me a little extra patience. I was inspired to use cotton cleaning patches as swatch samples to test my color, so no molle gear was harmed during this fabulously colorful clusterfuck. I tried mixing in more green and adding more water to dilute the dye, but I still got purple. Luckily I didn't spill any in the wife's kitchen or manage to turn the dog or myself purple in the process, so I am just out $10 bucks and two hours of my long weekend. Using rit dye to get coyote brown is not as simple as I thought it was going to be. View Quote The Right Reverend Bishop Snerd? |
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Watch this space. In the meantime - be evil.
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Originally Posted By backbencher:
The Right Reverend Bishop Snerd? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By backbencher:
Originally Posted By HermanSnerd: My first attempt at making USMC Coyote brown using Rit dye today ended up a dismal failure.
I went to the Rit web site and looked through their archive of color formulas here: https://www.ritstudio.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/ColorRit_FINAL.pdf I went through all of the colors with a few pieces of Eagle coyote gear in hand and found what to my eyes looked like the perfect color match for coyote. It is on page 29 of the archive color pdf and is the last one in the fourth row titled Yellow 3 #359 The formula is 1tbsp Kelly Green, 1 tsp Cocoa brown, and 1 cup water. I mixed up the 3 to 1 ratio of Kelly Green to Cocoa brown with 1 cup of vinegar and approx. 3 gallons of water in a large stockpot, and the result was.......... the most god-awful royal purple you could ever imagine! I am normally pretty impatient, but today, the gear gods smiled on me and gave me a little extra patience. I was inspired to use cotton cleaning patches as swatch samples to test my color, so no molle gear was harmed during this fabulously colorful clusterfuck. I tried mixing in more green and adding more water to dilute the dye, but I still got purple. Luckily I didn't spill any in the wife's kitchen or manage to turn the dog or myself purple in the process, so I am just out $10 bucks and two hours of my long weekend. Using rit dye to get coyote brown is not as simple as I thought it was going to be. The Right Reverend Bishop Snerd? Man, if I had a white suit, I could have dyed that sucker purple, and been the coolest looking pimp in Memphis on Saturday night, and then wore the same suit to an inner city church on sunday and worked up a sweat in the pulpit! Can I get an Amen! |
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Terminally infected with both Black Rifle Disease and Edged Tool Syndrome at the same time!
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Amen!
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NRA Life Member
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raf - I really dig the color of the apple green mix on the DCU, particularly the radio pouch. I also like the brown (taupe) radio pouch. My question is, which do you think is closer to regular WWII khaki? (The 'original FDE' LOL. I have no problem with it being slightly different, in fact the German did this quite often. I had a gebirgsjager pack whose pockets were a darker green than the main bag, and I've seen enough similar to believe it was done on purpose and not just a happy accident. At distance I think the slightly different color pouches might be an advantage. Great thread BTW.
ETA: I see 3 pouches that are a really nice brown - one is a waist bag. Did you use taupe for those, and if so, for how long? That may be the perfect color or here in the transitional desert. I still like the apple green though. I also was thinking about just dying an ACU FLC with black dye for a black shotgun setup, but I am rethinking it after seeing the great dark brown FLC on page 1. (Shenanagins FLC) |
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Looking forward to NEXT year's Superbowl. This one sucked.
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Originally Posted By Morg308:
raf - I really dig the color of the apple green mix on the DCU, particularly the radio pouch. I also like the brown (taupe) radio pouch. My question is, which do you think is closer to regular WWII khaki? (The 'original FDE' LOL. I have no problem with it being slightly different, in fact the German did this quite often. I had a gebirgsjager pack whose pockets were a darker green than the main bag, and I've seen enough similar to believe it was done on purpose and not just a happy accident. At distance I think the slightly different color pouches might be an advantage. Great thread BTW. ETA: I see 3 pouches that are a really nice brown - one is a waist bag. Did you use taupe for those, and if so, for how long? That may be the perfect color or here in the transitional desert. I still like the apple green though. I also was thinking about just dying an ACU FLC with black dye for a black shotgun setup, but I am rethinking it after seeing the great dark brown FLC on page 1. (Shenanagins FLC) View Quote I have gone through my posts in this thread, and numbered them for easier reference. Each series of pix is captioned by an explanation of the color(s) used. Please re-read the captions to see if they are clear enough. If things are unclear, or if you want further explanations/tips, ask away. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Reformed Arfcom citizen through the brutal teachings of NorCal LEO and the forgiveness of the Penguin, Aimless. - Prison Inmate #87
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I must be a dyetard.
I'm color blind, so I thought I start off simple. An old, white, cotton soft armor carrier. I wanted it to make it dark green. (There was none available so I got kelly green and black.) Used the whole box of green powder and about 1/2 the black. The color looked good. Did the stove-top method, kept it in the dye for a little over 20 minutes, constantly stirring. (After 10 minutes it didn't seem to get any darker.) Drained it, wrung it out and then rinsed with cold water. It was a deep, dark green. After it sat for an hour, tossed it in the washer and it came out with a light green hue. What did I do wrong? Rinse too quickly? Wash too quickly? Both? |
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“Those who expect to reap the benefits of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it.” Thomas Paine
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Originally Posted By Miami_JBT:
I think this is the best color combo for me.... http://www.ar15.com/media/viewFile.html?i=67331 Looks great. What are the instructions for that color? View Quote That is straight Rit Apple Green on UCP. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Raf,
Where are finding Apple Green? I've checked all the big box stores and several craft stores locally (N Fla) and can't find it. |
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Originally Posted By nipster74:
Raf, Where are finding Apple Green? I've checked all the big box stores and several craft stores locally (N Fla) and can't find it. View Quote Order from www.ritdye.com if you can't find it locally.. Or Amazon. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By Stevil1300:
I must be a dyetard. I'm color blind, so I thought I start off simple. An old, white, cotton soft armor carrier. I wanted it to make it dark green. (There was none available so I got kelly green and black.) Used the whole box of green powder and about 1/2 the black. The color looked good. Did the stove-top method, kept it in the dye for a little over 20 minutes, constantly stirring. (After 10 minutes it didn't seem to get any darker.) Drained it, wrung it out and then rinsed with cold water. It was a deep, dark green. After it sat for an hour, tossed it in the washer and it came out with a light green hue. What did I do wrong? Rinse too quickly? Wash too quickly? Both? View Quote No salt added when dyeing cotton as per instructions on Rit site? For one thing, cotton always looks darker when dyed a dark color, and when wet. It's not easy to dye to a pre-determined darkness with cotton. To do that, you need to experiment. What I would suggest is to re-dye with dark green dye, doubling the amount required for your given weight of fabric. Wet the cloth first, in order to get a baseline on how dark the cloth looks when wet. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf:
That is straight Rit Apple Green on UCP. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By raf:
Originally Posted By Miami_JBT:
I think this is the best color combo for me.... http://www.ar15.com/media/viewFile.html?i=67331 Looks great. What are the instructions for that color? That is straight Rit Apple Green on UCP. Full instructions on www.ritdye.com. Click "Techniques" button, and start reading. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Wow! I really like how the 3 color desert camo came out! I really like how its a deep/darker brown.
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I like the waist pack (brown) in pic 12 and the radio bag in pic 14. Did you use taupe for the waist pack? Apple green for the other? How long did you keep them immersed?
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Looking forward to NEXT year's Superbowl. This one sucked.
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Originally Posted By Morg308:
I like the waist pack (brown) in pic 12 and the radio bag in pic 14. Did you use taupe for the waist pack? Apple green for the other? How long did you keep them immersed? View Quote Waist pack dyed with straight Rit Taupe. Radio pouch 4 parts Rit Apple Green and one part Rit Dark Green. Immerse in HOT water--just off the boil, and don't forget to add vinegar--for nylon. Turn over and over so that ell surfaces are dyed equally. Make sure you can pull the item easily and quickly once the desired shade is reached. Pull the item when desired color is attained. With nylon, what you see is what you get. Dye one item at a time, so you can control the color better. After the first item, the second item will require a significantly longer immersion time to reach the same shade as the first. At some point, you will need to add more dye, since the preceding items have reduced the dye concentration. If you are using a mixture of dyes, pre-mix additional dye. What I suggest is that you go to USRO or some other vendor who is selling (in the case of USRO, a multi-pack of UCP 40 MM grenade pouches for cheap) or multiples of something inexpensive in your desired base color. Experiment until you can get the desired shade on the base items, and then dye with a certain amount of confidence. At this point, I consider myself an amateur. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Thanks raf! Great thread.
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Looking forward to NEXT year's Superbowl. This one sucked.
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Originally Posted By Morg308:
Thanks raf! Great thread. View Quote You might also rummage through http://stores.alleghenywholesale.com/ for multi-packs of appropriate items |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf:
No salt added when dyeing cotton as per instructions on Rit site? For one thing, cotton always looks darker when dyed a dark color, and when wet. It's not easy to dye to a pre-determined darkness with cotton. To do that, you need to experiment. What I would suggest is to re-dye with dark green dye, doubling the amount required for your given weight of fabric. Wet the cloth first, in order to get a baseline on how dark the cloth looks when wet. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By raf:
Originally Posted By Stevil1300:
I must be a dyetard. -snip- What did I do wrong? Rinse too quickly? Wash too quickly? Both? No salt added when dyeing cotton as per instructions on Rit site? For one thing, cotton always looks darker when dyed a dark color, and when wet. It's not easy to dye to a pre-determined darkness with cotton. To do that, you need to experiment. What I would suggest is to re-dye with dark green dye, doubling the amount required for your given weight of fabric. Wet the cloth first, in order to get a baseline on how dark the cloth looks when wet. Didn't notice the "no salt" for cottons. Reading the instructions always helps!! I will follow your advice and get dark green and double up on the dye. Thanks! |
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“Those who expect to reap the benefits of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it.” Thomas Paine
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Originally Posted By Stevil1300:
Didn't notice the "no salt" for cottons. Reading the instructions always helps!! I will follow your advice and get dark green and double up on the dye. Thanks! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Stevil1300:
Originally Posted By raf:
Originally Posted By Stevil1300:
I must be a dyetard. -snip- What did I do wrong? Rinse too quickly? Wash too quickly? Both? No salt added when dyeing cotton as per instructions on Rit site? For one thing, cotton always looks darker when dyed a dark color, and when wet. It's not easy to dye to a pre-determined darkness with cotton. To do that, you need to experiment. What I would suggest is to re-dye with dark green dye, doubling the amount required for your given weight of fabric. Wet the cloth first, in order to get a baseline on how dark the cloth looks when wet. Didn't notice the "no salt" for cottons. Reading the instructions always helps!! I will follow your advice and get dark green and double up on the dye. Thanks! Read Rit instructions first, before re-dyeing. IIRC, salt is added when dyeing cotton. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf:
Read Rit instructions first, before re-dyeing. IIRC, salt is added when dyeing cotton. View Quote Will do. I used salt the first time, I'll check their site before I do it again. (It was a pretty easy process.) I think the issue was I didn't leave it in long enough as well as have the color dark enough. The good thing is I can try again. |
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“Those who expect to reap the benefits of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it.” Thomas Paine
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I ordered some taupe Rit dye, and will try again when it comes in.
Wish me luck. |
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Terminally infected with both Black Rifle Disease and Edged Tool Syndrome at the same time!
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I just did a Desert Molle MSS carrier with dark green rit dye. Dyed it once and it didn't come out as dark I was wanted. Gave it another go last night and it looks pretty good.
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ETA for the book being available on Amazon : October 1st.
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Originally Posted By Morg308:
Pics or it didn't happen. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Morg308:
Originally Posted By nipster74:
I just did a Desert Molle MSS carrier with dark green rit dye. Dyed it once and it didn't come out as dark I was wanted. Gave it another go last night and it looks pretty good. Pics or it didn't happen. You're going to make me open up a photo account just to prove it? OK. I guess I could do it... But I'm not taking a pic of my feet!!! |
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Originally Posted By nipster74:
You're going to make me open up a photo account just to prove it? OK. I guess I could do it... But I'm not taking a pic of my feet!!! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By nipster74:
Originally Posted By Morg308:
Originally Posted By nipster74:
I just did a Desert Molle MSS carrier with dark green rit dye. Dyed it once and it didn't come out as dark I was wanted. Gave it another go last night and it looks pretty good. Pics or it didn't happen. You're going to make me open up a photo account just to prove it? OK. I guess I could do it... But I'm not taking a pic of my feet!!! In this thread, your feet MUST be dyed the same color as the gear. |
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Managing Member of Mischief
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Every citizen should be a soldier. This was the case with the Greeks and Romans and must be that of every free state. -Thomas Jefferson
EVERYCITIZENASOLDIER.org |
Originally Posted By backbencher:
In this thread, your feet MUST be dyed the same color as the gear. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By backbencher:
Originally Posted By nipster74:
Originally Posted By Morg308:
Originally Posted By nipster74:
I just did a Desert Molle MSS carrier with dark green rit dye. Dyed it once and it didn't come out as dark I was wanted. Gave it another go last night and it looks pretty good. Pics or it didn't happen. You're going to make me open up a photo account just to prove it? OK. I guess I could do it... But I'm not taking a pic of my feet!!! In this thread, your feet MUST be dyed the same color as the gear. Damn, and I just got all the dye out from under my fingertips!!! Kinda off topic, but has anyone ever dyed any old canvas gear? I've got an M-14 pouch I've had since '93 that looks pretty ratty. |
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I've been watching this thread, and had wondered how RIT affects the IR reflectiveness. So, I went and did some GOOGLEing, and found this thread, if anybody was wondering.
http://www.ar15.com/mobile/topic.html?b=6&f=18&t=417911 For the TL/DR crowd, it would seem that RIT doesn't affect the IR properties. |
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"The strongest reason for people to retain the right to keep and bear arms
is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government." - Thomas Jefferson |
Originally Posted By FLATFOOT762:
I've been watching this thread, and had wondered how RIT affects the IR reflectiveness. So, I went and did some GOOGLEing, and found this thread, if anybody was wondering. http://www.ar15.com/mobile/topic.html?b=6&f=18&t=417911 For the TL/DR crowd, it would seem that RIT doesn't affect the IR properties. View Quote I am wearing RIT died ACU and USMC desert in this video |
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Every citizen should be a soldier. This was the case with the Greeks and Romans and must be that of every free state. -Thomas Jefferson
EVERYCITIZENASOLDIER.org |
Just finished dyeing some 3-color desert items, including a pack with Rit Taupe dye. Pix after the stuff dries, probably a few days. Pretty good facsimile of Coyote brown, if I do say so myself.
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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I'll be interested to see how it came out.
Like I posted earlier, I've done a MSS carrier with Dark Green and Black. Did a third go round and left in about an hour and I'm really happy with the results. |
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Everything's fully dry. Apologize for delay due to high humidity caused by a few days of rain/drizzle
Just finished dyeing some other stuff as well. The idea for this dye job was to dial-in the process of using straight Rit Taupe dye on 3-color desert camo. From the left, an SDS-made pack, small pouches for 1911 mags sold by Old Grouch for cheap, http://store.oldgrouch.biz/sistpimapomo.html, a CB pop flare pouch from LBT which I plan to use as a carrier for a LifeStraw, some original and some dyed GI desert camo straps, and an undyed GI MOLLE 3-color Desert Camo radio pouch The mag pouches were advertised as "color: Wheat/Coyote brown", and were practically yellow, which is actually the color of wheat. Nice little items, dye up well enough, and are appear well-made. Price is stupid cheap. The horizontal compression straps on the face of the pack were added by me, and the webbing was surplus USMC Coyote Brown. To the naked eye, the actual color of the dyed pack is almost indistinguishable from the CB compression straps. Picture A Picture B Picture C |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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That apple rit dye on page 2 looks great. I'll have to find some and try it out on a ucp pattern I have laying around.
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Just finished dyeing another batch of stuff. For instance a Tan Interceptor outer shell into an excellent Coyote Brown, and a couple of LBT packs from UCP into a nice green. Also another desert camo pack into CB.
It's getting easy now. Just keep the dye bath hot, and replace the dye as it is used up. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By RTUtah:
Probably one of the best packs I've ever had. Super old-school rig that I had all the way back in Scouts and High Adventure. Not wild about the red so I wanna subdue it but I'm not sure if I wanna go 100% black unless it's my only option. What color(s) should I try? If I could get the red dyed to FDE or taupe, or even a Wolf-grey, that would be ideal. http://i146.photobucket.com/albums/r249/RTUtah/pack_zpsea4a33dd.jpg View Quote Forget about lighter earth tones, as it's impossible to dye lighter than the base color. IMHO, and no experience in dyeing original red, my suggestion is to double-up on the required amount of Black dye, and be satisfied if you get at least a dark maroon. |
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"The M1 Rifle is the greatest battle implement ever devised." General George S. Patton Jr.,US Army
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Originally Posted By raf: Forget about lighter earth tones, as it's impossible to dye lighter than the base color. IMHO, and no experience in dyeing original red, my suggestion is to double-up on the required amount of Black dye, and be satisfied if you get at least a dark maroon. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By raf: Originally Posted By RTUtah: Probably one of the best packs I've ever had. Super old-school rig that I had all the way back in Scouts and High Adventure. Not wild about the red so I wanna subdue it but I'm not sure if I wanna go 100% black unless it's my only option. What color(s) should I try? If I could get the red dyed to FDE or taupe, or even a Wolf-grey, that would be ideal. http://i146.photobucket.com/albums/r249/RTUtah/pack_zpsea4a33dd.jpg Forget about lighter earth tones, as it's impossible to dye lighter than the base color. IMHO, and no experience in dyeing original red, my suggestion is to double-up on the required amount of Black dye, and be satisfied if you get at least a dark maroon. Shit in that case, I'm leaving it.
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http://www.ar15.com/forums/t_1_5/1604816_Gentle_Propositions____BOOK_IS_LIVE_ON_AMAZON___.html
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I think raf is right. A dark almost black could be obtained.
I've had really good luck just leaving items in the bucket, weighted down so they don't float, for an hour of so. If I ever get around to it I'll post some photos of stuff I've dyed. That being said, ILBE and Molle Packs are super dirt cheap and you could probably save yourself the hassle of messing with dye. |
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