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Fugitive dyes: Imaginary or real?
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Dyes that do not run or bleed are called fast dyes. A dye that runs or bleeds
when the fabric contacts water or solvent is said to be fugitive.
Imaginary bleeding
I have received some complaints of dye bleeding sent to my laboratory that
turned out to be imaginary. On black and white fabrics with checks, stripes or
black trimming on a white garment, there is often an optical illusion of dye
bleeding or color migration.
When I sectioned off the white portion from the colored section it turned out to
be an illusion of bleeding. I investigated the phenomenon and found that that
the illusion is created by the way the eye receives the color.
The effect of dye bleeding when observing black and white is known as Hermann’s grid. The effect can be observed by simply staring at black and white stripes
and checks. Then isolate the
Dye bleeding problems
Fugitive dyes may run into the area surrounding the dye or transfer from a dark
lining onto an outer fabric. This is known as dye migration.
Fugitive dyes may also run into another garment. This is known as dye transfer.
The newly affected area will be color-stained or streaked. The area from which
the dye came from often does not show a color loss.
Dye bleeding may occur in normal wear from perspiration, spillage of food or
soft and hard drinks. Dye bleeding may also occur in drycleaning, spotting or
wetcleaning. Inspect garments when accepting them for dye bleeding on the
underarm, waist and collar area due to perspiration. Check stained areas for
dye bleeding.
Spotting
When spotting, use a cloth under the stained areas. Check the cloth after
flushing and note dye transfer.
When spotting fabrics that may have fugitive dye, use the steam gun with
caution. Work in small areas always flushing into cloth. Dry rapidly with the
air gun.
Do not put the garment into the drycleaning machine while it is damp or wet.
Avoid the use of wetside chemicals which accelerates the bleeding of fugitive
dyes.
Drycleaning
Some garments with fugitive dyes may bleed when drycleaned. If no water is used
in the drycleaning system, the condition can usually be corrected by simply
re-cleaning. Do not use soaking action to correct dye bleeding. The garment
that has the bleeding problem must have proper agitation to reduce dye
bleeding. Use normal extraction and dry accordingly.
Wetcleaning
Dye bleeding occurring in wetcleaning frequently occurs on loads requiring mild
agitation. Garments that bleed due to lack of agitation may only require
running the garments over again with adequate agitation. It might be necessary
to do this several times.
Spot bleaching
Some dye bleeding that cannot be corrected in re-cleaning and re-washing may
need spot bleaching. The best spot bleach to use is titanium sulphate. Apply
this bleach with a Q-tip. It may be necessary to apply Vaseline on some colored
areas to prevent migration of the bleach. Test colors for safety.
Bath bleaching
Some dye bleeding may require bath bleaching. The best bleach to use is titanium
sulphate. Test the base dye since the bleach may only affect the dye that bled
but not the base dye. If your testing determines that the base dye can be
affected, dilute the bleach bath and only leave in the garment a few seconds
before removing and rinsing.
Red dyes
Red dyes are known to be potential bleeders and should carefully be tested for
dye fastness. You can easily test a red dye to drycleaning by wiping an
unexposed area of the garment with a cloth damp with volatile dry solvent.
To test the dye for solubility to water, flush an area of the garment with the
steam gun into a cloth. Note how readily the dye transfers. If a dye is
fugitive to solvent it is usually safe to water and vice versa.
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