

🌈 Tie-Dye Like a Pro—No Fuss, All Fun!
The Tulip One-Step Tie-Dye Kit in Mermaid offers 5 vibrant, nontoxic dye colors in easy-squeeze bottles, enough supplies for 30 projects, and includes gloves and rubber bands. Designed for natural fibers, it requires no presoak, making it the ultimate hassle-free creative kit for bold, colorful fabric art.






| ASIN | B07CJ7XGMW |
| Best Sellers Rank | #58,090 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #144 in Fabric Dyes |
| Brand | TULIP |
| Color | Mermade Green |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (1,122) |
| Date First Available | 30 May 2018 |
| Item Weight | 204 g |
| Material | Cotton,Plastic,Rubber,Wool |
| Model Number | 37934 |
| Product Dimensions | 21.59 x 10.16 x 3.51 cm; 204.12 g |
N**A
Beautiful colours
Made some lovely tie dye clothing. The pastel colours are lovely for girls.
S**Y
I love it
K**Y
Bought this for my kids, each made a shirt and plenty of die left for another day. The shirts came out really good and they had fun. It’s pretty messy but that’s to be expected.
R**E
Good fun
E**N
This kit was exactly what I was after. It can get abit messy but best to do it outside. The colours are exactly as I expected, first time tie-dying and this comes woth everything. Extra dye packets, elastic bands, multiple pairs of gloves. Great value for your money.
D**N
I thought these colors meshed really well together. For some reason the lavender looks gray in my pictures but in person, it is just a very pale lavender with no gray undertones. These colors worked because they didn’t blend and get muddy like the other Tulip kits I’ve purchased. I’m not sure if that’s the colors or just me being careful not to oversaturate or mix colors. The Aegean Sea color that looks gray in the stock photos is actually a lovely sea green color. It’s like if army green and teal got together and had a baby, that baby would be named Aegean Sea. I am pleased with this kit. I only left the dye on for one hour because I heard that it makes the colors look more pastel. And I wanted a softer tie dye. Honestly I can’t tell a difference in that strategy. The turquoise and purple are as vibrant as the turquoise and purple I’ve left on for 12-24 hours in previous tie dye projects. I’ve been tie dying shirts all summer going through this craze with my kids, and one recommendation I have is that you treat your fabric with soda ash prior to dying. Buy a pound of it on Amazon for about $8, put the whole pound in a bucket of mop bucket water, and let your shirts sit in it for 30 minutes. Take shirts out and wring them out completely, then dye fabric immediately while damp. I swear the soda ash makes the colors so much more vibrant! My first tie dye project I did not do the soda ash and my colors were very dull. Almost like a tie dye shirt you’ve owned for 15 years. Just kinda bland. The soda ash really works and I’m honestly not sure how but it makes a noticeable difference. I also have been letting the shirts soak in vinegar after dying and rinsing, but vinegar doesn’t do anything to make the colors set or stay. It’s a wasted step. My shirts come out vibrant and stay that way for many washings regardless if I “set” the final product with vinegar or not! Have fun! Swirl pattern is the easiest. Crumple is cool but you have to be careful to not really mix the colors as you’re applying the dye all over. I strategically placed the dye all over but was careful not to overlap colors. Overlapping a bit is ok but too much makes the final product a big ole blob of mixed colors. Sounds cool except the colors will not be the colors you bought. Fuchsia and green will somehow make a dark muddy violet. Turquoise and purple will make a murky navy violet. It’s best to try the swirl or some sort of stripe pattern where the colors stay separate.
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