Houston Chronicle

Using sustainabl­e plants for tie-dye creations.

- By Jessica Testa

Sustainabi­lity may be fashion’s favorite buzzword, but Hillary Taymour, the designer behind Collina Strada, doesn’t just pay lip service to the concept; she brings it down to earth, treating sustainabi­lity as something everyone can practice every day, for example, by dyeing a white T-shirt using beets and turmeric.

“I look at tie-dye as a form of hand-painting on clothes,” Taymour said. “There’s no way to make exact replica tie-dyes.”

She has been using tie-dye in her collection­s since 2018, sometimes with three to six different techniques in one garment, elevating the summer camp pastime into an artisanal practice. Here, she demonstrat­es one technique: the subtle plaid tie-dye.

Step 1: Make the dye.

Prepare two pots of boiling water. Cut up the beets and place in one pot, allowing them to boil for one hour. Add a splash of the vinegar. This will help your dye hold pigment.

Pour the turmeric into the second pot and boil for eight minutes.

When both dyes are done, pour them into two bowls (or similar large containers).

Step 2: Fold your shirt.

Lay the shirt on a flat surface. Pinch the fabric between the neck and shoulder seam of the T-shirt. Carefully drag it toward the middle of the shirt, creating a vertical fold down the centerline of the shirt. Fold the sleeve inward, too, aligning its edge with the far end of the fold that you just made.

Repeat on the other side of the shirt. You should have one long column.

Step 3: Fold your shirt … again.

Pick up the shirt and carefully fold it vertically down the centerline,

outward or away from you. (You’re folding one of the long halves behind the other, making your column thinner by half.)

Lay the column flat, and imagine that it is horizontal­ly broken up into four pieces.

You’ll be piling the four quarters on top of one another but alternatin­g the direction of the folds. You can start by folding the bottom quarter upward. Then take that two-layer stack and fold it underneath the next quarter of the shirt. Continue alternatin­g folds until the shirt looks like a thick rectangle.

Step 4: Grab your two rubber bands.

With the rectangle vertical, wrap two rubber bands around the shirt horizontal­ly so that the shirt is split into three segments.

Step 5: Time to dye!

Using a spoon, start dropping turmeric dye into the center of the shirt. Leave the edges white. Make sure the dye saturates through all of the layers, spooning the turmeric in between each fold.

Now pick up the bundle and dip the white edges into the beet dye, counting to 15 seconds, and repeating on all four sides. Essentiall­y your rectangle should have a yellow center with a pink frame.

Step 6: Let the bundle dry.

Open it up and lay it flat to dry overnight. (Don’t hang it up!) It’ll be ready for you to wear the next morning.

 ?? Photos by Charlie Engman / New York Times ?? Hillary Taymour, the creative director of Collina Strada, has a creative use for beets that involves tie-dye.
Photos by Charlie Engman / New York Times Hillary Taymour, the creative director of Collina Strada, has a creative use for beets that involves tie-dye.
 ??  ?? Taymour uses beets and turmeric to create the dye she uses for tie-dyeing T-shirts.
Taymour uses beets and turmeric to create the dye she uses for tie-dyeing T-shirts.

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