Magnoli satchel v2... dyed

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WeeMadHamish
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Magnoli satchel v2... dyed

Post by WeeMadHamish »

I received my Magnoli v2 satchel a week ago, and while the construction and details are spot on, like some others I felt the color was too on the brown/tan side of olive. Though I didn't find it terribly offensive, I decided to give it a dye bath. So a couple of washings and a dip in Kelly Green Ritt dye later, here's the result:

Image

Meant to snap a before shot, but I forgot to in my excitement. But there's plenty of pics over here Anyway, I like the color much better now, and the repeated washings have already started to fade the color along the edges.

Now, where's the bleach...
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Weston Freeman
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Post by Weston Freeman »

That looks really good.

I got my hands on a Magnoli satchel a couple of weeks ago, and while I love it as it is, after seeing that photo I'm sorely tempted to dye mine too.

Going to pick up some green dye in town today anyway to work on my original MKVII bags, so... :)
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Holt
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Post by Holt »

there is nothing else to say than PERFECT!!

best
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rjallen70
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Post by rjallen70 »

outstanding job!!!
It just about makes me wish I had kept mine.
I wonder if there would be anything to keep the dye off of the lanyard loop and strap loops?
Wax maybe?
Ron
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Pitfall Harry
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Post by Pitfall Harry »

How long did you let it soak in the Ritt Kelly Green dye?

How is the bag holding up after repeated washings? Did you let it air dry?

It looks really nice. :) I *may* do that with mine. ;)
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Post by Nobody »

I was planning on keeping my Magnoli satchel the tan but now I'm thinking that I might dip in a diluted green bath just to give it a tint of green.

WeeMadHamish did you use the RIT at the correct ratio or more watered down?

Thanks,
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Post by andrewindy »

hi WeeMadHamish,
I was wondering about the same thing as Nobody above too. Did you use dark green or kelly green? I use dark green for mine, and it turn out really really dark. But doesn't kelly green look more like grass green? your MkVII looks like olive drab green though. it is awesome!! let us know the ratio or the color you use. thanks
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WeeMadHamish
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Post by WeeMadHamish »

I used a full packet of the powdered dye with just a dash of detergent and ran it through a full wash cycle. The nice thing about the RITT dye is that it really only tints the fabric and you need a lot of it to get really bold color, so the original olive-tan color of the canvas isn't wiped out. I used Kelly Green which with the gold undertones yeilded a nice olive green. I got the Dark Green as well, but I took a gamble on the Kelly first and it paid off.

As noted, the webbing and lanyard loop did get dyed a darker green color, but I'm not terribly put off by it.

Pitfall: Well, after three consecutive washings, there's no sign of any stitch wear. It's definitely solidly-made! There was some minor (original) dye release along some of the folds and wrinkles, but that only adds to the weathering in my opinion. I let it air dry to keep it nice and wrinkled.
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Castor Dioscuri
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Post by Castor Dioscuri »

Honestly, that bag looks so much like my unissued, vintage MKVII that I'd be hardpressed to tell the difference! Talk about impressive!
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Post by andrewindy »

thanks for the info WeeMadHamish :D
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Weston Freeman
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Post by Weston Freeman »

Following in Ham's footsteps, I dyed my Magnoli satchel yesterday. Finding Rit dye here in Hamilton seems to be an issue, so I used Dylon Cold Dye instead (Leaf Green).

The result (please forgive the moiré patterns affecting the middle two photos):

Image

Image

Image

Image
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WeeMadHamish
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Post by WeeMadHamish »

Looks good to me. :tup: Also looks like it was more forgiving to the webbing than the RITT dye (which turned my strap webbing dark green.)
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Post by Nebraska Brad »

Great work guys! They both look very similar to my unissued MKVII. I may need to try this on my own Magnoli bag.

-Nebraska
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Indiana Max
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Post by Indiana Max »

Ok guys you convinced me, I´ll try the same on my one :D
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