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DIY Dyed Rug

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In response to our recent post about Alexandra Wentworth's dyed rug profiled in Elle Decor, the mother of an Apartment Therapy reader was kind enough to send in her own step by step DIY version for us ...

 
 

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My daughter forwarded this post (referring to the Alexandra Wentworth rug) to me because this spring I had dyed a small rug to cover some stains. It is a wool Karastan, good quality and soft to the feet, so I didn't want to lose it in my home office area. I had a packet of rit dye that I bought years ago but never used in a blue jean color, but added another packet to make the color deeper. I took the rug outside, laid it on an old shower curtain, dissolved the dye and put it into an empty windex container. Then I sprayed the dye all over the rug until the color was fairly even. I let it dry but noticed that it felt like it was coated and stiff. The next day I took the garden hose and totally sprayed the rug, washing out some of the color. The resulting color looks to me like faded blue jeans and it restored the soft feeling of the wool. I like how it looks now, much better than before, with stains that would not come out even with professional cleaning. I think you could use just about any color on an off white rug. It was simple and cheap.

Thanks Suzanne! We commend you for saving a soiled, but perfectly good rug from heading to the trash, giving it a new life. Bravo!

Tags

How To..., green ideas, inspiration, recycling & donating, rugs & carpets, Elle Decor, Alexandra Wentworth

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Comments (16)

This is smart. Rit dye rocks! There is WAAAAAY tackier DIY all over the place. (like the original rug that sparked this post)

posted by teeze on June 25th 2009 at 2:18pm
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I love how that turned out and it's not tacky it's very smart. Not everyone can afford the latest and greatest. Reusing things is also a great way not to waste.

posted by Home style tips on June 25th 2009 at 2:27pm
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I think it's lovely. Reuse is always smart.

posted by Nevanna on June 25th 2009 at 2:42pm
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This turned out really well, I think. I love RIT dye ~ I am always dying my white shirts pink when they get stains on them... specifically in the underarm area. Shut up!

Nice save on the rug, Mom!

posted by tracipants on June 25th 2009 at 2:45pm
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I don't like the color at all, but I do like how this person reused exisiting items instead of springing for new ones. This is the mentality people need to take on more.

posted by ellear on June 25th 2009 at 2:50pm
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Definitely looks better than AW's rug.

posted by indie.mom on June 25th 2009 at 2:51pm
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When I saw the first photo, I was, like, "Oh no. This is gonna look so wrong!"

Ha - fooled me. Looks great, at least as shown in the After Photo. If the dye had been all streaky looking, that'd be one thing. But it looks like it's been this blue-jean color all along.

posted by david @ justveggingout.com on June 25th 2009 at 2:51pm
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I'm undecided on the color but I agree that this is a great idea and much better than just tossing out the rug.

posted by insanity_pepper on June 25th 2009 at 3:51pm
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Actually, I bet the texture of the rug shoes off much better now than it did when it was white and there was no contrast at all to show it off. In fact it was this that made me really like the results of the project.

posted by Jose A on June 25th 2009 at 4:06pm
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How does it work when you wash it? Do the colors run and mess up the original pattern or lines?

posted by baileyb on June 25th 2009 at 5:29pm
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Thanks for your comments. I just wanted to share what I thought was a good save. I really liked the rug, but not with the stains. That looked tacky, for sure! I haven't washed the rug yet as I only dyed it last month, but you can see how soaking it with the garden hose after I sprayed on the dye actually helped the colors fade, mellow, and become more uniform. I like it and I think if I need to wash it in the future, I will probably just do the same thing with the garden hose, rather than spot clean. It will probably continue to fade some more, like good old blue jeans. I like blue, but muted, so this works for me. I think one of the reasons it worked is because the fiber is natural wool, which has such a resilient quality. I good quality rug is an investment.

posted by SuzanneD on June 25th 2009 at 7:09pm
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I don't understand... doesn't the dye transfer to the floor? Whenever I have dyed clothing, it bled in every wash... I can't imagine a garden hose would rinse it out well enough.

I like the idea though... nice save. I'd just be terrified of spreading that color all through the house... on my feet, or whatever.

posted by clickchick on June 26th 2009 at 12:22am
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have you checked to see if your feet are blue? I use rit and a lot of times I am blue afterwards- especially with cottons. How did you aet the colors? thanks for sharing looks very nice.

posted by profumodibergamo on June 26th 2009 at 12:24am
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oops
set
the colors

posted by profumodibergamo on June 26th 2009 at 12:25am
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yeah just wondering if the dye is coming off on shoes or the floor...otherwise great idea

posted by ichi on June 28th 2009 at 9:26am
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Yeah, I'm curious about the color bleeding too. I don't think it would come off on your feet/shoes (I've dyed several shirts with Rit dyes, and wearing them doesn't stain my skin) but what about on the floor underneath?

posted by Emika on June 28th 2009 at 10:21am
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