🌈 Revive, Reimagine, Recolor!
RitDyeMore Liquid Dye in Sapphire Blue is a 7-ounce dye solution specifically formulated for synthetic fabrics and blends containing 35% or more polyester, acrylic, acetate, or nylon. With over 250 color recipes available online, this dye is perfect for rejuvenating faded clothing, upcycling projects, and creating unique patterns like ombré and tie-dye. Note that it requires a stainless steel pot for high-temperature dyeing and is not suitable for washing machines.
Compatible Material | Acrylic,Stainless Steel |
Item Weight | 9.6 ounces |
A**R
Great for dying your knives scales
I dyed the G10 scales of my CIVIVI Vision FG with this. They took the color in beautifully and it were finished in under a minute. I soaked them a few minutes extra just to be sure Id get an even finish. Used half a bottle for the pair, but with how quickly they took the color in Id guess 1/4 bottle would probably do the trick just fine.
B**M
Works!
Excellent! Used my washer and did the job!!
J**R
Salvaged an Expensive Shirt!
I had a bright white UV shirt that cost about $60 back in 2022. When I went to wear it, it was simply too bright. In 2024 I decided to salvage the shirt, so I bought the blue dye. The shirt is made of synthetic mix of spandex and something else. I put 1 gallon of water, 1 teaspoon dish soap, and the whole 7 ounce bottle, and heated to 212F. Placed my long sleeved shirt for 15 minutes and stirring. The results were perfect, like a factory blue shirt. I used the remaining dye solution for a 2nd shirt of the same brand (and older one in light grey) and that one came out good too.
A**
Results not as good as I hoped but not as bad as it could have been.
I got this vintage (from the 60s/70s) dress that was possibly the worst shade of pink for my skin tone, and so I decided to try and dye it (even though this was a risk since it says dry clean only). The tags didn't have the fabric composition, so I just took a guess that it was synthetic, and bought the synthetic fabrics dye. I had two bottles (I only needed one for the weight of the dress) because I wanted it to be as saturated as possible. I kept it in the pot the full hour, and when I took it out even though I had followed the directions with the stirring and everything, there were parts of the skirt where the dye didn't take evenly and gave it this tie-dye effect instead. (Maybe this wouldn't have happened if I had a bigger stock pot?) I let it cool off and then put it back in the pot for another 45min, stirring the whole time, but it didn't really even out. Overall, the result is fine. It's not as deep/bright as I was hoping, and the color isn't even, but because the underskirt dyed brighter/more saturated, it helps to camouflage the blotchy areas of the overlay. I wouldn't wear this to a wedding, but I would wear it to a less formal party.
A**R
worked fine
used to dye action figure.
J**T
Works like a charm.
I bought this to dye knife scales made of G10 from cool grey to blue. It worked perfectly. Since I didn't need much, I had most of a bottle left so I dyed a bunch of white paracord, and another set of G10 knife scales. Still have 1/3 of a bottle left. Recently used the Rit Dye-More Charcoal dye to dye my hat and another set of knife scales (polypropylene this time) and both worked took the dye perfectly.
L**V
How hard could it be?
I gave this five stars because I'm sure it's a great product. But fair warning to all my fellow lazy DIY girlies, if you only skim the directions and refuse to measure anything it's probably not going to go great. I used this for a Halloween costume so I didn't really care how it came out, it just needed to be blue. It came out blue, a bit splochy and unloved, but blue. At the end of the day I have no one to blame but myself and that's okay. Moral of the story, if you're dying something you care about I'd suggest following the instructions because winging it resulted in a solid 6/10
B**N
Doesn't Work on Fabric Blend.
I wanted to make these cotton/polyester blend chinos royal blue, like the sweater behind. I used Rit sapphire for polyester first. No go. So then I did a new Rit dye bath of royal blue for cotton. No go. ... Well barely. They were a medium dark drab gray-blue work/chino color originally. And even though I followed the directions closely, the two types of dye did not move the color very far from the original. The pants are 35% poly and 65% cotton. So I neded up altering some old, too small, corduroys that were the right color, to wear with the sweater. And the drab blue looks good with some other stuff I already had in the closet.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago