















🎨 Elevate your craft with colors that speak louder than words!
Jacquard Brill Blue Acid Dye is a concentrated powdered dye designed for vibrant, colorfast results on protein fibers like silk, wool, and cashmere. Safe and easy to use with just vinegar as the acid, it offers uniform, brilliant shades ideal for dyeing, painting, or printing. Made in the USA, it preserves fabric softness while delivering professional-grade color intensity.
| ASIN | B0019IGKRE |
| Best Sellers Rank | 320,297 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) 202 in Fabric Dyes |
| Brand | Jacquard |
| Colour | Multicolour |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (83) |
| Date First Available | 10 Nov. 2010 |
| Item Weight | 22.7 g |
| Material | Acrylic |
| Model Number | 102844 |
| Product Dimensions | 4.57 x 4.45 x 6.35 cm; 22.68 g |
M**N
... colour sheep fleece for needle felting it is a Great product easy to use beautiful vibrant colour and gives ...
I used this dye to colour sheep fleece for needle felting it is a Great product easy to use beautiful vibrant colour and gives great results.
M**A
) - this is the best dye I have used
I have done a lot of dyeing fabric over the years (I'm talking a lot of years!) - this is the best dye I have used. I took my courage in my hands and dyed an off-white cashmere dressing gown and blanket that had got a bit old and icky. They now look glorious. And still as soft as they were before, which is the real revelation. I'd definitely not use any other dye after this. Thank you.
K**2
Brilliant!
I used 3 pots to dye a linen duvet cover and pillowcases and they came out as new! I’m so pleased and it was relatively easy. The washing machine was going all morning but better than the olden days when we had to stir a big pot for hours. Really really pleased! Thank you!
W**Y
Brilliant colour!
Fabulous brilliant colour ! Best dye I've used - and I do quite a lot of home dyeing . Easy to use too.
M**S
Five Stars
Perfect product, the garment is as good as new following the use of the dye.
C**N
Five Stars
splendid
S**Y
The reason this is “small” is because the color is highly pigmented. This style of dye is for people who are experience with fabric dying or are willing to learn new techniques. This isn’t the run of the mill RIT dye. This is for making your own fabrics, high quality interesting dyed garments. I’d look into the benefits of soda ash, urea and other additives that make your fabric dye even more effective.
S**2
Ich habe mehrere Jacquard-Farben bestellt, alle färben super gut und lassen sich in der Wolle gut fixieren. Die Farben sind untereinander und auch mit anderen Säurefarben gut mischbar. Ein Stern Abzug für die große Verpackung, die nur zur Hälfte gefüllt ist.
A**J
Great for dyeing my sweater yarn. I used 1.5 containers for 500g of Knitpicks Stroll.
N**L
Outside of the fact that Ritz dye has become impossible to find around my area and it was hard to apportion when coloring real tiny items, these Jacquard Acid dyes seem to be more intense, do not smell and don't bleed at all. I am only dying thin strings of wool to use as wrist wear, can only find them in Kabbala red which isn't where we're at but I found some white wool thread that just needed to be dyed the right color. I received my Brilliant Blue almost overnight (love instant gratification) and immediately tried coloring a thread, too dark, use less powder. The next string was perfect. The powder should last forever since I only used less than a pinch. I have a violet coming this week. Makes me feel so creative!
T**T
When I put the wool into the pot (small quantity, four long stings) that bright blue color I saw in other reviews showed up, I was excited. But then it said I needed vinegar, and all I had was apple vinegar, and as soon as I added it, the color went to a dark blue. I continued stirring hoping it would wash out in the last step back to that original blue, but nope, it just got darker. As you can see my wool strings are now black, and therefor are useless. I’ll have to buy everything again and use a different die, or maybe reach out to customer service (if they have any) and figure out what I did wrong (I loved the original blue color). Their stovetop directions say “Prewash fiber. Use about 2 gal. of water for 1 lb. of fiber (am I supposed to derive some sort of formula based on these quantities??). Mix die (the whole bottle??) into hot water and stir. Add Fiber. Heat to near boil (180 deg). Add 1/4 cup of vinegar (any vinegar??? White vinegar only? Am I supposed to use some sort of formula??) or pre-dissolved citric acid. Stir for 30 min. Let cool. Rinse in warm water.”
Trustpilot
3 days ago
3 weeks ago