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Miss Camel, Athens, GA Age and Occupation: 29, high school teacher Fiance's Age and Occupation: 35, high school teacher Engagement Date: March 2012 Wedding Date: May 2013 Venue: Cloverleaf Farm About Me: I'm a high school social studies teacher who started her career teaching English in Japan with the JET Program. I love photography and history. I also like to travel and take naps---two things that you would think contradict each other, but somehow they don't. My heroes are Dwight Schrute, Liz Lemon, the Dude, and T.E. Lawrence. I traveled the world throughout my 20s only to fall in love with the social studies teacher in the classroom next door to mine. He just happened to be the kindest, most compassionate, and selfless person I had ever met and each day I'm so thankful to have him in my life. We are planning a whimsical, relaxed countryside wedding with a little Marie Antoinette flair thrown in for good measure. Please join us on our wedding planning adventures!
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DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric

December 6th, 2012 @ 6:16 am by Miss Camel

Recently I set out to create an ombré-dyed fabric ribbon display for our engagement shoot later this month. Because that is what crazy brides do these days. I also want to use it as some kind of backdrop at the wedding and possibly for our engagement photos. Here’s the inspiration:

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy DIYOmbr01 DIYOmbr01

Image via: Green Wedding Shoes / Photography by: Dallas Curow / Event design by: Elyse Cragg

Seriously, when did ombré become a thing? Because it’s apparently a thing now, and now I need it and I don’t know why. I also know that I want to try and recreate the last photo (seen above) for our engagement shoot, so sign me up for some ombré. But instead of the chandelier, I’m thinking of something more practical like this:

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy DIYOmbr02 DIYOmbr02

Image via: Style Me Pretty / Photography by: Archetype Studio Inc.

I would like to start by warning my readers that this project can get very messy. Fabric dye can damage all sorts of things, including furniture, pets, carpeting, and even your counter tops. Like, lose-your-apartment-deposit damage. Please be very, very careful using fabric dye. I would recommend wearing old clothes and rubber gloves for this project. Also, this project works best outside on a lawn. We live in an apartment and were able to make it work out on our patio. I set up a clothes line and laid a painter’s tarp down to protect the wood from the dye drippings. Our neighbors officially think that we are crazy, but that’s OK.

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy DIYOmbr03 DIYOmbr03

(personal photo)

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy WhatYou03 WhatYou03

  • Fabric dye (I used Rit.)
  • Fabric in the lightest color you desire for the ombré effect
  • Clothesline
  • Clothespins
  • Spray bottles for every color of dye you will be using plus one additional spray bottle for water
  • Bucket
  • Rubber gloves
  • Tarp

Step 1: Set Up

Set up the area where you will be working. Have the clothesline hung, clothespins ready, and the tarp laid out in the ground beneath your working area.

Step 2: Prepare Dye

Fill the spray bottles with fabric dye. I only poured a small amount, around one tablespoon’s worth of dye. You could probably use even less if you are going for a more subtle ombré effect. Next, fill the rest of the spray bottle with very hot water. Be sure to do this carefully over the sink and not over your counter or your floor. Before finishing up, don’t forget to fill your extra spray bottle with hot water.

Step 3: Soak & Hang Fabric

Soak the fabric in hot water until it is completely wet, and then use the bucket to transfer the wet fabric outside. Hang the wet fabric evenly from the clothesline.

Step 4: Spray Fabric

Make sure that your spray bottle is set to spray in a fine mist. Begin misting the fabric, starting sparingly and lightly at the top (or wherever you want the ombré effect to begin). I started a few inches from the top. Spray the fabric more heavily as you move down, focusing most of the spray on the bottom portion of the fabric. Continue spraying until your fabric reaches the desired darkness. If you feel that the ombré effect needs more blending, use the spray bottle of water to even it out.

 Step 5: Let Dry

Let the fabric dry for a few hours. I used paper towels to soak up the water/dye that accumulated on the tarp as I was working. The rest I am just leaving outside and hoping it dries up and goes away. It’s not going to dry up and go away, is it?

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy DIYOmbr04 DIYOmbr04

The results are in! (personal photo)

DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric :  wedding athens decor diy Finishe02 Finishe02

Tips:

This is something that works best with practice. I would recommend doing a test run first before using your final project fabric. Also make sure that you don’t neglect the edges of the fabric. If you look at the pink sheet below you will notice that the left edge seems a bit lighter. Ultimately this will be unnoticeable as I will be cutting the fabric into strips, but this is something to keep in mind if you plan on using the entire piece of fabric for a project.

Rit Dye also has their own ombré tutorial, but it seems a lot messier than this method. You can check it out HERE. I think the method that I used gives you a lot more control over the intensity and placement of the dye. But check out the other tutorial in case it is a better fit for your project! (Or not, because I think mine is better.)

What would you do with ombré-dyed fabric? Bonus points if you answer this as if you were part of the Miss America pageant.

Tags: athens, decor, diy |
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11 Responses to “DIY Ombré-Dyed Fabric”

1.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Bat (message)  285 posts, Helper bee

It looks so great, Miss Camel! Thanks for the tutorial, and can’t wait to see what you do with the fabric!

 
2.
cosmo_gmr
Member
cosmo_gmr (message)  709 posts, Busy bee

World Peace? :)

Seriously, it looks amazing! Can’t wait to see the end result!

 
3.
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Bee
Mrs. Wallaby (message)  1,733 posts, Bumble bee

Love it!! Good job!

 
4.
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Bee
Mrs. Dragon (message)  2,864 posts, Sugar bee

That’s so cool! I’ve seen ombre cloths used for table coverings which I think is neat — or a photobooth backdrop!

 
5.
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Bee
Miss Gray Wolf (message)  628 posts, Busy bee

you did an excellent job!

 
6.
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Bee
Mrs. Pony (message)  8,382 posts, Bumble Beekeeper

It looks great!

 
7.
MrsArtsy
Member
MrsArtsy (message)  210 posts, Helper bee

I love what you did! It turned out great!

I just have to vent of how much I hate “Ombre” as a “hot new trend”… it’s a gradient… and they’ve been around for a long time! Ha!

I do love me some gradients though, and I’ll probably have to incorporate a few into my wedding planning.

 
8.
FoolsintheRain
Member
FoolsintheRain (message)  668 posts, Busy bee

I would use fabric dyed ombre to end world hunger and make world peace.

But seriously- can’t wait to see the final product.

 
9.
RnbwznPuppies
Member
RnbwznPuppies (message)  590 posts, Busy bee

That turned out awesome… it seems like so much work though! I think I’m too lazy for diy.

 
10.
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Bee
Miss Armadillo (message)  480 posts, Helper bee

Aah, SO COOL! Makes me want to jump on the ombre bandwagon now, haha! Seriously, mad skillz, Miss Camel.

 
11.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Camel (message)  330 posts, Helper bee

@RnbwznPuppies: It’s really not too much work. The hardest part is the clean up and patiently waiting for it to dry. You should try it out!

@Miss Armadillo: You know you want some ombre!! ;)

 

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Miss Camel
Miss Camel

Miss Camel, Athens, GA Age and Occupation: 29, high school teacher Fiance's Age and Occupation: 35, high school teacher Engagement Date: March 2012 Wedding Date: May 2013 Venue: Cloverleaf Farm About Me: I'm a high school social studies teacher who started her career teaching English in Japan with the JET Program. I love photography and history. I also like to travel and take naps---two things that you would think contradict each other, but somehow they don't. My heroes are Dwight Schrute, Liz Lemon, the Dude, and T.E. Lawrence. I traveled the world throughout my 20s only to fall in love with the social studies teacher in the classroom next door to mine. He just happened to be the kindest, most compassionate, and selfless person I had ever met and each day I'm so thankful to have him in my life. We are planning a whimsical, relaxed countryside wedding with a little Marie Antoinette flair thrown in for good measure. Please join us on our wedding planning adventures!

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