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Mrs. Lemon, Los Angeles/Monterey Age and Occupation in 06: 26, Graduate Student (Public Policy) Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Environmental Consultant Engagement Date: April 7, 2006 Wedding Date: July 7, 2007 Venue: Rosary Chapel & Monterey Marriott, Monterey, CA About Me: My FI and I met online, but we like to tell people that we met at a "cookie shop" which is the technical location of our first encounter. He proposed exactly 1 year, 1 month and 6 days after our first date (it's the only part of his proposal speech that I remember), and we're planning long-distance from Los Angeles for a July wedding in my hometown of Monterey, CA. I have a passion for all things "cool, cute and quirky" and I enjoy video games, reading blogs (WeddingBee, trashy celeb, consumer & political) and crafting in my spare time, if I have any!
About Mrs. Lemon

Way back in ancient times, when I was getting married, I thought it would be wonderful to have custom apparel for our bridal parties (yes… guys included). But there was one huge problem with this scenario: cost. Sure, custom embroidery and screen-printing both look great, but there was no way I had the funds or means to do something “extra” like that as a graduate student planning a wedding.

In order to fulfill my desires, I went ahead and found a way to buy cheap shirts at wholesale prices and DIYed my screen-printing, and 2 years later, people are still sporting around their t-shirts & tanks around town.

lemon4

(Details on the ROSE tank tops can be found here, and the TEAM t-shirts here)

Recently, I stumbled upon a couple other fun methods of making t-shirt designs: bleach & crayons! In case you’re interested, here are some more details on the process and the outcome:

1) Bleach (via a Clorox Bleach Pen)

First, I picked out a bold black and white graphic that I wanted to use: Sleeping Beauty’s Castle. But the problem was that my image was only big enough to fit on an 8×11″ sheet of paper… and I kind of wanted something a little bit bigger. In order to enlarge it quickly and easily (as opposed to chopping layers in Photoshop), I used blockposters and quadrupled its size. I printed out the images on 4 pieces of vellum, and taped them together to recreate the image.

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Then I quickly cut out off the excess paper (still leaving a good sized border) and taped down marking areas for where I liked the design on the shirt. I ended up inking the design in 3-passes (top, bottom left & bottom right) so I made sure to put down good marks for where the pieces of paper needed to be laid back down.

2

I used plastic sheets inside of the shirt to prevent any bleeding, but you could easily use magazines or cardboard as well.

Then — I got to bleaching! For this project, I used a Clorox bleach pen (sorry for the lack of photos of “in process crafting” — the bleach was making me tear up a little bit), which you can find in your laundry soap aisle. I flipped the design over and basically just traced the lines in bleach, then laid it back down on the shirt and pressed down the vellum.

Here’s what the first pass (top half) looked like:

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I went ahead and did the same thing with all three sections, and then waited for the design to dry:

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I used a hair dryer to set the bleach (about 5 extra minutes of drying after I had laid down the last piece), and then rinsed out the shirt underneath the shower. Once it was wrung dry, I put it in the dryer for 30 minutes to set the design up.

And in the end, I came out with this:

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Now while it might not be instantly recognizable as Sleeping Beauty’s Castle, I think it’s a pretty fun artistic interpretation of it… thanks to bleach bleeding, air bubbles and my desire to be a bit more detailed than I should have been with the design. I was kind of operating off the cuff, since I’ve never seen anyone try and use a template to transfer the bleach. Next time around, I think I’ll invest in some stainless steel applicator tips (as recommended by Martha) to ensure more consistency with the bleach, maybe use a sheet of transparency paper instead of vellum, and leave the detail as an afterthought to fill in the design, rather than putting it on the template.

#2: CRAYON!

I had seen these fabric Crayola crayons in the sewing section previously, promising that you could iron any design you drew on paper onto fabric! Well, after reading some reviews online, it sounded pretty darn neat to me, so I decided to give it a whirl.

For this project, I figured a plain ‘ol Mickey Mouse design would work well. I was hoping I could wear the shirt under a cardigan/open sweatshirt, so an easy center design was best as well. I printed out this Mickey design on vellum (probably not the best thing to use, but I was short on time as far as positioning was concerned), and flipped it over.

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I traced the outline I wanted and then filled in the black parts with purple. Lots of crayon shavings went awry (probably due to the vellum), but I was still able to color quite heavily.

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After coloring, I flipped the design over again, and ironed it down on my shirt for about a minute on the cotton setting.

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When I peeled up the design, I ended up with this:

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It’s definitely a very light transfer of Mickey, but I think it works out great. Kind of like a sketched out piece of artwork… but not as obvious as a screen-print. The down side of this shirt is that it’s not supposed to be “dried in a dryer” — and I’m not sure if I want to test out the warning to see if it’s true or not. It would be great on a tote bag or something else that wouldn’t be washed, though!!!

So hopefully you’ll get some creative ideas from these methods and be able to DIY yourself some fun wares for your VIPs. Oh… if you need those discount prices on shirts, try jiffyshirts.com or trendyblanks.com (for American Apparel).

Tags: , , , |   Link for this post | Share this post: So You Want to Customize Your Bridal Party?      
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23 Responses to “So You Want to Customize Your Bridal Party?”

1.
Bee Icon
Bee
miss mouse (message)  3,301 posts, Sugar bee

Wow, those both turned out great! Thanks for the tips.

 
2.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Quiche (message)  2,175 posts, Buzzing bee

Cool! I wonder if those crayons would work on canvas sailcloth-type bags? What do you think?

 
3.
Amber1279
Member
Amber1279 (message)  316 posts, Helper bee

awesome ideas!! I never heard of either. Thanks for the instructions & photos!!

 
4.
frenchbulldog
Bee
frenchbulldog (message)  6,063 posts, Bee Keeper

I’ve been following this one your blog and I didn’t even know you could use crayons like that - SO COOL! Thank you for sharing your shirt escapes :)

 
5.
Miss Deviled Egg
Bee
Miss Deviled Egg (message)  892 posts, Busy bee

Cute! I did something similar to the crayon method in elementary school, but I never saw the bleach method. I really like how your brown shirt turned out. Looks great!

 
6.
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Bee
Miss Bruschetta (message)  5,553 posts, Bee Keeper

I think they both look really neat! And so much better than using just the traditional iron-transfer paper. Thanks for the idea!

 
7.
MrsSl82be
Member
MrsSl82be (message)  1,472 posts, Bumble bee

Awesome!! I may have to use the bleach method for our t shirts, thanks!!

 
8.
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Member
lilmochi (message)  3 posts, Wannabee

great DIY experiments! thanks

 
9.
Ms. Sapphire
Member
Ms. Sapphire (message)  231 posts, Helper bee

So creative! Both shirts came out great. Thanks for sharing.

 
10.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Hot Cocoa (message)  1,715 posts, Bumble bee

oooh . . . I was going to order some custom t-shirts from cafepress, but now maybe I’ll DIY them.

 
11.
Josalyn
Member
Josalyn (message)  355 posts, Helper bee

Awesome idea!

 
12.
Mrs. Penguin
Bee
Mrs. Penguin (message)  2,148 posts, Buzzing bee

So, you’re dead set on going to DW with your husband… right? Cause, um… I can make myself available. This is too awesome. I love the castle one especially… it’s like an expensive designer shirt, at 1/4 the price and 5x the tears.

 
13.
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Guest
 
14.
Hayley
Member
Hayley (message)  214 posts, Helper bee

the castle shirt is AMAZING!!! i’m not so crafty sometimes….but this i have to try =)

 
15.
Mrs. Leopard
Hostess
Mrs. Leopard (message)  807 posts, Busy bee

What a cool idea - now I’m going to ruin several shirts trying to do my own ;)

 
16.
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Member
renaissancetrophywife (message)  233 posts, Helper bee

Wow, that is super crafty! I love the way your shirt came out!

 
17.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Green Tea (message)  705 posts, Busy bee

i was bouncing off my seat excited about those crayons until the no dryer clause. you’re killing me smalls! next time disclaimers need to go before, not after the post! :)

the gold rose blue tank is one of my all time fav WB projects, and hey, it’s always good to see you ’round here!

 
18.
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Member
karilynn6 (message)  99 posts, Worker bee

Those shirts are awesome! You could design a whole line of them and sell them on Etsy. I’m definitely going to have to get to work on some of my own - I love those bleach pens.

 
19.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Duckling (message)  1,349 posts, Bumble bee

I love the artsy look of the bleach shirt. I may have to try this!

 
20.
mandalynn17
Member
mandalynn17 (message)  1,071 posts, Bumble bee

OH I like the crayon ones. The no dryers clause doesn’t bother me. I air dry half of my clothes anyway!

 
21.
tbanks33
Member
tbanks33 (message)  71 posts, Worker bee

I never would have thought of that. I love the look of the bleached shirts.

 
22.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Avocado (message)  1,407 posts, Bumble bee

I’m just going to say again how awesome these shirts are. Blockposters is a great link!

 
23.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Flamingo (message)  1,267 posts, Bumble bee

Ooo - loving it! I might have to attempt the bleach pen… if only I knew I wouldnt of thrown away my shirt that I used on a colored shirt- thinking it was like TIDE-to-go. I know I know

 


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Mrs. Lemon Mrs. Lemon, Los Angeles/Monterey Age and Occupation in 06: 26, Graduate Student (Public Policy) Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Environmental Consultant Engagement Date: April 7, 2006 Wedding Date: July 7, 2007 Venue: Rosary Chapel & Monterey Marriott, Monterey, CA About Me: My FI and I met online, but we like to tell people that we met at a "cookie shop" which is the technical location of our first encounter. He proposed exactly 1 year, 1 month and 6 days after our first date (it's the only part of his proposal speech that I remember), and we're planning long-distance from Los Angeles for a July wedding in my hometown of Monterey, CA. I have a passion for all things "cool, cute and quirky" and I enjoy video games, reading blogs (WeddingBee, trashy celeb, consumer & political) and crafting in my spare time, if I have any!
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