
Short of going for the full cover-in-undergrowth camouflage technique, do you reckon I could dye the material a stealthy colour without destroying the performance of the fabric?
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
err, probably not if the fabric is synthetic:didnothingfatal wrote:If you are serious this stuff will do the job http://www.ritdye.com
Best go and tell the guys over here then, they dyed a MSR tent with it.royAB wrote:err, probably not if the fabric is synthetic:didnothingfatal wrote:If you are serious this stuff will do the job http://www.ritdye.com
From the Rit site (and a lot of personal experience of fabric dyes/paints)
''.... there are fabrics and materials that will NOT accept dye such as ...
100% polyester, acrylic, acetate, fiberglass, spandex and metallic fibers
Fabrics with rubber backing (bath mats or throw rugs)
Fabrics with special finishes such as water repellents'
There are however fabric spray paints eg. http://www.fabricspray.co.uk/fabric-spray-paint that will do a reasonable job, but to have any permanence on synthetic fabrics, they have to be 'dusted' on and will need re-coating fairly often on something like a tent that gets tightly packed.
As a general note:
'There are hundreds of different fabrics produced in the world today, and unfortunately Simply Spray will not work on all of them. As a rule of thumb, if water can absorb into the fabric then Simply Spray will too. If your fabric is coated in some way and water cannot absorb into it, then Simply Spray will not work. You can simply pour some water onto the fabric and see if it absorbs into the fabric or if it runs off'
You could wait until it's dark before you pitch it, then no one will see it :)Hi chaps. I rather like my Nemo Gogo Elite for trips where I want a bit more comfort, but the yellow is really not good for stealth...
why did no-one think of that beforethis might sound daft but how about just throwing a camo net over it for stealth purposes???