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![samehadaku bleach samehadaku bleach](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/QvgnPvlD-bM/maxresdefault.jpg)
Step Two: Put your non-porous board between the layers of the shirt and smooth out the fabric This protects the back of the shirt and also makes the process easier by giving the surface some support. Make sure that any stray bleach mist won’t damage the surface. Step One: Assemble your stuff on your work surface. I used the brass calligraphy symbols, but you could use anything – doilies, leaves stick-on letters, shells, twine and sticks – be creative. Here’s what you need – a black shirt (cotton, already washed), some chlorine bleach (Clorox), diluted 50/50 with water and put in a small spray bottle ( label it!! Work outside!!), a non porous board like foam core to put between the front and back of the shirt to keep the bleach from bleeding through, scrap paper to mask off your bleaching area, masking tape to stick the paper to the shirt, and some INTERESTING OBJECTS to use as reverse stencils. Discharging is the process of removing dye (by destroying or altering the dye “chromophores”) with various chemicals or bleach, often in pleasing patterns or designs through Shibori or Tie Dye methods, or by stamping, stenciling or block printing (definition from Dharma Trading Company).
![samehadaku bleach samehadaku bleach](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/86/13/77/8613772feddddb853545d09bfe3b1faf.png)
![samehadaku bleach samehadaku bleach](https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-tNKjrQVEnTY/V4aEYWwTwQI/AAAAAAAABDE/ZTgvEw4lXAInuCuyjkACd12upkqKaypDQCLcB/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/bleach.jpg)
So I took an old black shirt and used some diluted bleach to create a reverse stencil design in what’s called Discharge Dyeing. The more I looked at them, the more I knew I didn’t want them on the wall.īut the designs were cool. Mike went to a garage sale on Saturday and found some brass Asian calligraphy characters that were used as wall decorations.
![Samehadaku bleach](https://kumkoniak.com/85.jpg)