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quiltykim 08-01-2015 07:10 PM

Instant Antique
 
Hi! I have a spray bottle of Instant Antique made by Primitive Gatherings and wondered if it is permanent and will withstand occasional washing? Thanks much! Kim

Bree123 08-01-2015 07:53 PM

I've never used it, but why not contact Primitive Gatherings directly. They are really great about responding to questions right away. Everything I've ever bought from them has been washable (including their hand dyed wool), but I can't say for sure that you can wash quilts treated with Instant Antique.

Here's a link to their Contact page: https://www.primitivegatherings.us/contact-us.html

ManiacQuilter2 08-02-2015 04:09 AM

What is "Instant Antique"?

quiltykim 08-02-2015 04:25 AM


Originally Posted by Bree123 (Post 7274248)
I've never used it, but why not contact Primitive Gatherings directly. They are really great about responding to questions right away. Everything I've ever bought from them has been washable (including their hand dyed wool), but I can't say for sure that you can wash quilts treated with Instant Antique.

Here's a link to their Contact page: https://www.primitivegatherings.us/contact-us.html

Thanks! Done!

quiltykim 08-02-2015 04:26 AM

Instant Antique is a spray that gives fabric that "antiqued" look - kind of like if you tea stained a fabric.

Melanie Rudy 08-02-2015 12:27 PM

I have a friend who didn't like the brightness of one of her quilts, so she tea-dyed the whole quilt in a bathtub. She was very happy with the results. I did not see the quilt, but was interested in the possibility of using her method.

Stitchit123 08-03-2015 03:54 AM

A funny story about Tea Staining. several years ago I was visiting my family and my SIL was making cloth dolls for a lady. She brought the fabric. Well before us girls could take off for a week end camp out we had to make 200 dolls -the fabric felt weird-kind of like a dry -sticky yuk and it looked nasty. We washed and bleached the day lights out of it. On our way out for our week end we dropped the dolls off and the lady could not believe what we had done-she spent a whole day tea staining all that fabric. She only paid my SIL 1/2 of the deal. When this lady got back from her flea mkt travels -she called and wanted more of the bleached dolls. She only sold 1 tea doll and 200 bleached one's. She doubled the money on those and future dolls and paid her to bleach the 199 dolls she could not sell. We ended up camping for 5 days to recuperate- I did most of the sewing while SIL painted the faces and hands on each doll -then we stuffed them and hand stitched them closed all in 4 days.

Yooper32 08-03-2015 04:48 AM

What a great story! I am still laughing about it. Can just imagine the crow that woman had to eat.

toverly 08-03-2015 04:53 AM

That's a hoot, Stitchit123. It reminds me that we crafters don't always know what people actually want. Sometimes the ugliest thing in the booth sells first.

applique 08-03-2015 05:35 AM

I have used fabric paint (seta color) in a spray bottle to tone down or alter the tones of fabric.


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