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Sometimes you want things to look old and musty, as though you just took them out of the attic. Here's one way you can accomplish that.
 
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Step 1: Gather Materials

You will need:

Materials to be dyed. These should be primarily of silk or cotton, or an animal or plant based fibre. Not all of these dye equally, so be prepared to experiment.

Tea. It can be any kind, as long as it primarily contains tea leaves. If you have something old lying around, but hate drinking tea, now's your chance to get rid of it. Coffee will also work, and you can use coffee grounds that have already been brewed. It gives browner colours than tea. If you do use coffee grounds, makes sure to tie them up in a loose woven cotton like cheese cloth, or double layer of nylon tulle so you don't have to pick the grounds out of your dyed material.

Boiling hot water. Don't burn yourself.

A bowl or vessel to hold your materials being dyed and the tea/coffee grounds to dye them with. Make sure there's enough room for your materials to move around freely without the hot water spilling.

pianolover10124353 says: Apr 30, 2013. 2:35 PM
wow it makes them look a little vintage,i love it
LarrySDonald says: Jul 30, 2009. 10:08 AM
Sprinkling (by crumbling it between your fingers) a small amount of instant coffee over the material before drying creates a nice effect, like those little brown spots in old stuff that aged extra much and became a little browner. Nice tutorial.
PearlZenith (author) in reply to LarrySDonaldJul 30, 2009. 11:32 AM
Good idea. I don't drink instant, so never would have thought of that, but it seems similar to the technique of using glauber salt when dying and painting silks.
LarrySDonald in reply to PearlZenithAug 3, 2009. 8:12 PM
I don't either really. I saw it suggested on a documentary on art forgery (in this case rather lame forgery - basically making something that passed first glance and sold to dealers under the impression that you had no idea what it was worth basically asking them to rip you off). After seeing the results it looked kind of cool (with tea staining) so I did an old looking charcoal sketch of Spongebob and it turned out pretty cool.
PearlZenith (author) in reply to LarrySDonaldAug 3, 2009. 10:02 PM
Heh, that's an interesting use of 'aging' things. I have quite a few friends who really enjoy Steampunk; maybe I can age some photos if I print them onto nice heavy coverstock and use them as gifts. Do you have photos of how your sketch turned out?
LarrySDonald in reply to PearlZenithAug 4, 2009. 8:49 AM
Unfortunately no. It was quite a long time ago and I ended up losing the few scans I made of it and the sketch itself. I basically traced it with charcoal on rough sketch paper from a heavy line-art printout using soft charcoal. It looked like a very old document, which was sort of the interesting part - it's clearly contemporary due to the subject matter :-).
lemonie says: Jul 29, 2009. 12:20 PM
Tea is better than coffee, or about the same? L
PearlZenith (author) in reply to lemonieJul 29, 2009. 1:00 PM
They're just different. Tea gives orangier colours, coffee gives browner colours. Try both, and see what you like.
lemonie in reply to PearlZenithJul 29, 2009. 1:08 PM
Ta L
watermelonhead says: Jul 29, 2009. 9:39 AM
Ha, at first i thought it said TIE-dye. Heh. Good idea, it works with paper too :D
PearlZenith (author) in reply to watermelonheadJul 29, 2009. 11:16 AM
Yeah, that's true. I wasn't even thinking about that, but I have dyed paper for projects when I was in school and wanted to make them look more interesting.
watermelonhead in reply to PearlZenithJul 29, 2009. 12:43 PM
My 5th grade techer called it 'oldifiying'
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