I needed and wanted more than just brown/aged pages for my junk journals and wanted to try out food coloring. The final result is better than I could have ever imagined. Here's how to dye book page paper: You need Rit Dye in the colors you want, a container (I used an old 9X13 pan), warm water, book pages, 2 spoons (or metal tongs), foil and paper towels.
In the past year, sprayed pages have really grown in popularity-both publishers and book boxes creating special editions with colored edges! And so, today I wanted to bring you a tutoria. First cover the front and back "cardboard pages" of your book with a sheet of paper, covering the angles of the book. It's to protect the cover and avoid paint stains.
Dye book pages for any projects. Free tutorial with pictures on how to tie-dye in under 120 minutes by creating, decorating, dyeing, and papercrafting with water, book, and bowl. Find and save ideas about how to dye book pages on Pinterest.
Mix the dye with water (how much water/dye depends on how dark you want the top edge/head of the textblock). With the top edge/head clamped down thus, apply the dye. Wear gloves and use either a sponge, or crumpled paper towel to administer the dye.
Make sure the sponge/paper tower, once dipped in the dye, is completely wrung out. In this video I'll demonstrate how to put solid #coloured edges on a book. I will do a basic #edge preparation with a final brush burnishing and a more thor.
What works best for me is: clamp text block tight in a book press (I made my own out of two wooden cutting boards) so that the pages you want to paint are juuust a hair above the edge of the press boards. Use a dry paint brush to put a very thing layer of talcum powder on the page edges. You want this talcum powder layer to barely be there, so I usually use a second dry paintbrush to sweep.