Tea dying is a natural dying process that leaves a beautifully subtle color wash onto fabric. Dip dying is becoming a popular trend with soft furnishings. It not only provides a natural, handmade look; it is actually very simple to do yourself. I have made a set of three towels in two shades of tea. Black and raspberry transform natural, unbleached tea towels into soft, warm, and functional accents.
What You Need
Materials
- Unbleached Flour Sack Tea Towels: Easily found online in a variety of sizes. Prices range from $12.00 to $30.00 depending on size and count.
- 8 to 10 tea bags: I used black tea for a brown shade and raspberry tea for soft pink.
- Cooking pot: To boil your tea.
- Rubber Gloves
- Glass baking dish: Glass is preferred so that you can keep an eye on the dying process.
Instructions
1. Bring 1 quart of water to a boil.
2. Turn off heat and immerse tea bags for 8 to 10 minutes until you have a solid color tea.
3. Remove tea bags and gently pour tea into your glass baking dish.
4. Prep your tea towels by rinsing them with water. If you are working with large tea towels you will need to vertically fold them so that they will fit nicely in the dish.
5. Wearing rubber gloves, dip half of the tea towel into the tea. Lay the other half over the side of the dish and let sit until your desired shade is achieved. While the towel is soaking, you can press it down into the tea from time to time just to make sure the half is fully submersed.
6. When your towel has reached the shade that you want, gently lift the tea towel out of the dye and wring excess tea over the dish.
*I soaked my towels for 15 minutes, then rinsed. I decided that I wanted to go darker and submersed them again for another 15 minutes. Due to the unbleached towels being a natural shade, you will want to let them soak longer than your common bleached white towel. It's all up to you. You can soak them as long as you want to reach the desired color.
7. Rinse your towel in cold water until water runs clear.
8. Line dry the tea towel.
Additional Note: Naturally dyed tea towels will have a longer life when hand washed. Commercial detergents can be too harsh for the soft color wash.
Thanks, Rikkianne!
(Images: Rikkianne Van Kirk)







Commercial Flour Sa...
ooooooooo! I love tea dying, it's such an easy way to give new life to old textiles
I love this! I'm going to try this method using Tazo's Passion at different concentrations to create an ombre effect of pinks. Great job, Rikkianne!
Oooh such a great idea- I have a bunch of "seen better days" kitchen towels- this might be a great thing to refresh them. Thanks!
I agree! Thank you, makool. Truly simple!
Thank you, Cameron! I have been gobbling up all things ombre. There are some wonderful DIY's out there.
Just to add, you can also iron the tea towels once dry to help set the natural dyes.
Such an important addition! Thank you. Heat setting will certainly prolong the life of your towels. Plus, it's always nice to lift a crisp towel out of the linen closet. Love it!
i love the soft, subtle colors tea-dying creates! even though i'm surrounded by tea towels for a living and have tea-dyed many other things, i've somehow never tea-dyed a tea towel. fantastic!
I am a HUGE fan of natural colorants when it comes to art and house wares. Thank you for this easy-to-follow ECO tutorial. Brilliantly written!
What is the best place to buy these?? I looked on Amazon and no luck...I'd love to do this!!
I have bought from a few places online. Each purchase was a positive experience. Great customer care and fast shipping.
Links to browse:
Towels and Home - http://www.towelsandhome.com/flour-sacks.html
The Towel Place - http://www.thetowelplace.com/merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Store_Code=TTP&Category_Code=UN
ACS -
http://americanchairstore.com/floursacktowels.html
I have not bought from Gaiam but they are a more familiar name and have a set of 3 available.
http://www.gaiam.com/product/organic+cotton+flour+sack+towels.do