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Your cart is empty.WELYEME Tie Dye Powder Bulk, Fabric Dye Powder Pack, Cold Water Dye Set for Clothes, Tie-Dye Powder Kit
Little Mama
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2025
The quality of this powder is amazing, we’ve order 2-5 times and will definitely remain to order these for our tie dye business. I highly recommend, using for powder shirts or mixing with water. It’s works well either way!!
Marta Sieck-Dolan
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2025
great colors work great for tye dye
Shawn McCartney
Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2022
Follow the mix instructions and this works great... as to any tie dye make sure you fully saturate and try to use 100 percent cotton items for best results. The shirts sat 48 hours and the tapestry was 24 hours before my vinegar salt water soak.. washed dried and in love with each one I make with this prodoct
SIGNTEACH
Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2022
The first photo is taken during the unfolding of a shirt I dyed using this company, WELYEME’s, dye (except for the red). Notice how bright the colors are when the are fresh. In fairness, ALL dyes, no matter the company will be much more intense at this stage, but I wanted to demonstrate that I had used lemon yellow, not pastel yellow. I even doubled the amount of dye necessary for the mixture. This photo is taken during the last part of the usual process: the hand-rinse; I then machine washed in HOT (to permanently set colors) water using Synthrapol (to remove excess dye to prevent bleeding onto other clothing in the future); then machine washed a second time in HOT water a using regular laundry detergent AND fabric softener (to replace the softness the Synthrapol removed); and then dried in the dryer with a dryer sheet (for good measure and scent). The more heat, the better. These steps are the same steps EVERY one of my shirts goes through—all of those, plus the rigorous hand-rinsing (until water runs nearly clear) BEFORE the washing machine to prevent too much dye going into the machine. I want to be as transparent as possible so everyone understands how much washing each shirt has encountered—a LOT!The next photo of an EXTREMELY faded shirt is actually a photo of the same shirt as photo number one—after only one single wearing (and, of course washing afterward). All of the colors (except for the red) washed out completely and became pastel—which I guess is fine if that’s the look you’re shooting for, but my 6’3” 215 lb husband isn’t especially keen on pastels.The third photo I included is for comparison. This is another shirt I dyed over eight months ago, but for this one, I used Jacquard’s Procion MX Fiber Reactive Dye. Over those eight months, the shirt has been washed and worn at least twice a month. The photo speaks for itself. The colors have remained vibrant after all these washings; all the attempted damage by my cats while I’ve worn it; and just plain time, in general; it looks nearly the same as the day I dyed it. (I qualify with “nearly” because I’m sure there’s a least a small amount of fading, but it’s imperceptible.) The other shirt using WELYEME’s dyes barely made it through the initial rinse-out process.By the way, if you haven’t guessed by now, the red on the faded shirt—the one color that did NOT fade (it’s almost as if I’d PLANNED a test! But I most sincerely had NOT!) is Jacquard’s.I see others have posted photos of bright beautiful products they have created using these dyes. All I can say is that they are newly completed. They have not yet been washed; I don’t mean to be a naysayer, but there is no way those items will stand the test of time. I’d like to see how those items fair after they have gone through the washout process. If you plan to do a tapestry that never has to be washed, and there’s no concern for its colors rubbing off onto anything nearby, then these dyes may very well be for you! But if you plan to use them for wash and wear items, look elsewhere.I should have gone with my gut and purchased the higher quality dye, but I was thinking procion dye is procion dye, right? Apparently not. Foolish, foolish me! I thought I’d save $20-$30 instead of buying the 6 pack of 8oz Jacquard dyes. In the long run, I lost the $90+ it cost for this stuff (by the way, each canister is only 6.4oz—not 8oz like Jacquard and virtually ALL of the other professionals).If you’re serious about your tie dye, or if at least you want to see your new clothing colors remain bold and bright, save your money and buy the good stuff. Do NOT buy THIS!!! Run; don’t walk!
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