Retayne
I have found the perfect fabric for a project I'm working on, except I can't stop it from bleeding. It is basically a red background. I wish I had used Retayne before I tried other methods of stopping the bleeding but I didn't. I tried soaking it in vinegar/water after soaking it many other times in plain water. Nothing stops the bleeding.
The instructions on the bottle of Retayne says "for best results, treat fabric with Retayne before washing it for the first time or placing it into your quilt." BTW I have had this bottle of Retayne for many a year and have never used it. For those of you who have used Retayne, have you ever used it after washing the fabric ... does it stop the bleeding? What is the "long term" result ..... in other words, will the fabric bleed again? My "inner quilter" says I better not use this fabric. But it is so perfect for my project! I'm bummed ..... help! |
I have used this method successfully on both fabrics and clothes that were bleeding.
https://www.dharmatrading.com/chemicals/retayne.html The summary is that I soaked the items in Retayne and hot water for 30 minutes, then handwashed with Synthapol, rinsed, and dried in the dryer. Then I (machine) washed them again with a white rag to make sure there was no more bleeding. I didn't know the items would bleed until I washed them, so I don't think it's critical to use it before washing them for the first time. It's always going to be after I've washed something, because I'm not going to treat everything with Retayne just in case. I haven't had the bleeding come back, and as far as I know the fixing is permanent. |
If you already have Retayne, then you have nothing to lose by trying it. Do as Mitty did and check to be sure all bleeding has stopped after washing with Retayne. BTW, as you found out, vinegar does not set modern dyes.
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I use apple cider vinegar to set the fabrics that run. It works well. I bought a bottle of the retyne and it said it could cause cancer. I tossed it.
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I have been lucky 3 -4 color catchers works for me.
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My experience with Retayne was not good. It's been so long ago I can't remember the particulars. On the other hand, color catchers work, but it is never 100%.
Your inklings are probably correct. Anything that bleeds today will bleed tomorrow. They are still making fabric, so l'd look for another selection. If you sell or gift the quilt, you have no control over the new owner's laundering skills. My luck, it would come back in a heap. |
Originally Posted by RedGarnet222
(Post 8258566)
I use apple cider vinegar to set the fabrics that run. It works well. I bought a bottle of the retyne and it said it could cause cancer. I tossed it.
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As discouraging as it is I wouldn't use that fabric. Just not worth the risk to me.
I've noticed over the years that I use very little red even though I love the color. I've had so many bleeders. |
I had a bottle of Synthrapol for a year also. I have used it on bleeding fabric and it seems to work. Not sure what the difference is between Retayne and Synthrapol. You might try washing with a bit of white to see if the dye is sticking to the white or just bleeding?
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