

☀️ Turn sunlight into your next masterpiece—no darkroom required!
Jacquard SolarFast Dye in Burnt Orange is a 4oz sunlight-activated dye designed for creating detailed photographs, photograms, and shadow prints on paper and natural fabrics like cotton, silk, and hemp. This easy-to-apply dye develops permanent color with just sunlight exposure—no heat setting or chemical fixing needed—making it a versatile, eco-friendly choice for artists and designers seeking innovative mixed-media effects. Made in the USA and highly rated by creative professionals.
| Best Sellers Rank | #22,724 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #84 in Drafting Tools & Drafting Kits |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 500 Reviews |
A**R
It works!
I was a little skeptical because the dye looked gray and soapy out the bottle. I have done cyanotypes before so I was expecting a more watery dye. It worked great. I dyed a pair of jeans shorts (cotton/elastane blend) and exposed it to sunlight for 10 mins. I did not use the recommended detergent to wash my clothes and the design held up.
R**R
It worked
Worked well but you need to expose for longer than usual and you need to heavily coat. Have washed the tshirt I made with it and image lasting!
L**Z
Exposure time is critical for good details when negatives to expose an image you will need to do some experimentation.
This worked pretty well and the image came out pretty good for a first attempt with no previous experience with this type of product. The dark area contrast has faded after a few washes but the image is still very visible. I To create the print I used a high resolution inkjet film negative. Since this was my first time using this product and exposing on a t-shirt there were some challenges: Getting a shirt onto a board flat, applying the solarfast liquid evenly and a piece of glass to secure the film. Next time I would increase exposure in full mid-day sun instead of late day sun.
J**N
It works, but takes some PRACTICE
OK, here's the deal: do NOT just open this bottle up and dump it on your nice new T-shirt and expect an awesome result. I STRONGLY advise you to get an old piece of cloth (or some test paper if you are going that route) and cut it up and take a few test runs at this. It is NOT easy to work with. Here are a few things I learned: 1.) It's really easy to use too much. Cloth really soaks this stuff up, so go light, spread it around, and wipe off as much excess as you possibly can before applying your image (or objects). I actually settled for putting a little in a cup, brushing it on, then wiping off the area. Get after it with a paper towel. Yes, it is a bit wasteful, but putting it right on the shirt is way too much. 2.) Affix the image (or object) REALLY tightly to the cloth. I used transparency film (print two, double them up) and taped/clamped the whole thing together. Then I rubbed the film so it is sticking to the shirt as tightly as possible. 3.) The detergent is absolutely REQUIRED. I saw some people say they just laundered the shirt. Nope. Don't cut corners, it won't work. Get the special detergent, it's not that expensive. You also do not need much because... 4.) Hand launder the shirt. Don't leave this step to your machine, It won't do a good job. Put on some gloves, get a small tub, get the water as hot as possible, use a capful of detergent and scrub it for a good long while. The directions say 10 min, but that might be overkill. Do it at least 5, though. Your design may fade a bit. It's worth it to get the background down. 5.) White is REALLY hard to do. Yes, the detergent WILL remove all of the excess un-activated solarfast dye, but there will be a slight darkening. This is MUCH worse if you use too much dye. It is impossible to remove when overdone. As an example of these things, look at my image. Shirt on left over done. Way too much dye. Not enough wash out, which was done in a machine. Dye doesn't even look black (it is reddish, a sure sign you over did it.) Shirt on right is very little dye, aggressive hand-washing. It is possible to do a design without a hard border, but it is very tricky. A lot of headache can be avoided by using a "frame" for you image. Especially on white. If you are going border free, I suggest a color shirt. Also, make the light blocking border very large. The dye will creep, you can see where it did on my test runs. This took me 4 or 5 tries to hit on a good method. Hopefully, I can knock you down to 2 tries! Took off one star because this stuff is just really, really hard to work with, and they really don't have good instructions. They need a troubleshooting/pitfalls section, but they want you to think this is easy to do. They make it seem easy in a video. It isn't. But I DO like it!
M**.
Black/Blueish
It’s nice. Important to know it’s dries off as blue.
R**.
DO NOT BUY THE GREEN
I previously have bought the red, blue, and violet. All had the same slightly thick consistency, came out their respective labeled colors, and did NOT dye my hands in the process. I wanted to expand my options and bought an 8 fl oz bottle of the color green. I opened the cap and peeled the seal to find a brownish yellow. I thought that this may just be the color it goes on and it lightens to a green in the sun so I tested it out. As I sponged it onto my fabric, the color got on my fingers but I wasn't concerned as I wasn't in the Sun, so there was no reason it should permanently dye my fingers. I was wrong, the dye did indeed dye my fingers and hands and will not come off. Well, I finished putting the dye on my fabric, placed my film prints on top, then a glass panel on top of that. I left it in the sun for about 40 minutes because it was cloudy. The dye did not lift to a green, but a brownish yellow. I rinsed the fabric and the dye kept bleeding not matter how much I let the water run through it. I put my fabric in the washing machine yet it is still not green! VERY dissatisfied and disappointed.
P**P
Ehh
Ok it’s easy too use. Straight out of bottle. But it’s really not teal. It’s dark green and olivey yellow. It did work good on fabric, a tee shirt. On paper it was just meh. I suggest watching lots of YouTube videos for tips and tricks. The instructions are basic. I would but again but I’m the regular blue color
M**E
My new favorite fabric cyanotype dye!
Awesome product, works great. Can create super detailed images and bottle's instructions are accurate. Very easy to use
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