💙 Dive into Colorful Creativity!
Rit DyeMore Synthetic is a 7oz bottle of sapphire blue dye specifically formulated for synthetic fabrics, offering a vibrant and long-lasting color solution for your DIY projects.
J**R
Dye Hard, II
Ever since I saw people dying knife scales on the internet I knew that I had to start doing it myself.Well I never felt more like dying those scales blue, cuz I never thought they'd never lose Rit dye, dear. I simply did it their way.
D**C
Need a very large pot
The seller did a fine job of getting it to me in a timely matter. I haven’t actually used the product yet. I guess I should have read the directions online. I thought it was just like other Rit products I have used over the years that go in the washing machine. It’s not! This stuff goes in a pot on the stove. I don’t have a pot big enough to hold king size sheets.
V**L
worked for me on polyester curtains
I was able to tie dye polyester sheer curtains just as I wanted.
S**H
Worked well but clothes needed way longer than 60 min.
I bought this to use on my daughter's dance leotards since her class was changing from ballet pink to a deeper blue. From the picture it did its job but I had to soak the clothes way longer than the instructed time to achieve the right color. I let them sit for 3 days in the dye after simmering for an hour. And one of them I had to re dye because it came out more tie-dye than a solid color but overall it worked and it's better than buying more leotards for 15 plus a piece.
D**N
Beautiful color
I dyed some synthetic fur for making a miniature teddy bear. The color is just glorious!
D**D
Very vibrant
It is easy to use and the blueness of the color is great. Very vibrant.
B**D
Get rid of this Rit-Rot!
Didn't even come close to the color upon completion of dying process. Don't waste your money 💰
A**S
NOT appropriately named (color-wise)
When I saw that RIT offered "sapphire" I ordered SO quickly, figuring this would be one of their even more beautiful deep blues yet I am left surprised and really disappointed. I used the stovetop method because I wanted a very saturated tone and it was such a surprise as I stirred and watched and waited and it wouldn't go beyond a certain point. It's an okay blue but NOT AT ALL sapphire-like. Now I have to buy color-remover and move to a better choice. I've been using RIT dyes since I was 15 (I'm now 58!) so I really do know how to do this.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 weeks ago