![]() ![]() The Unitarian Universalist fellowship that I grew up in hosted a group of monks and they created a sand mandala in silence on the floor of our youth group room over the course of a weekend. Mandalas have long been created with colored sand by Tibetan monks as part of a spiritual/philosophical practice, and that’s how I got my first exposure to them. Now they are created throughout the world, including New York City. They were produced in Tibet, India, Nepal, China, Japan, Bhutan, and Indonesia, and date from the 4th century to present. Mandalas were thought to originally have been created in the service of one of the world's great religions, Buddhism. Symmetry, tessellations, fractals, and patterns are all found in the hundreds of thousands of mandala art pieces across the world and throughout history. Grab a pack.Ī “mandala” is a shape with repeating elements that grow from/around a central point. ![]() If you have additional questions, feel free to comment at the bottom! And a huge thank you to my friend and fellow dyer Melsy, who was the first person ever to show me how to tie a mandala back in 2017.Īll six of the mandalas below were done at WAXON Studio, on Dharma Trading Company’s 27x27” cotton “bandanas” - we love them for wall hangings, and they’re incredibly affordable. I love ice dyeing them, but you can also use liquid dyes in a bottle, or a combo of both (as you’ll see below in my step-by-step pictures).Ī big thanks goes out to the folks in the tie-dye Facebook groups for chiming in on what questions they’d like me to answer in this post. Three different skills, sort of like a trilogy of mandala-making. This blog post is all about how to fold, how to tie, and how to dye a mandala for ice dyeing. Once you’ve mastered the basic mandala, you can do a lot with it, and move on to more complicated versions, like the dream catcher fold. I have found that through teaching it, my brain has memorized the steps, and even the tying part goes more smoothly now than it did when I was first starting out. ![]() Whether you dye your mandala with liquid dyes, create an ice dye mandala it with powdered dyes, or dip-dye it, the beautiful points and lines of a mandala fold are super visually impactful! Here at WAXON, we teach the mandala tie-dye as an “advanced” folding technique, but once you’ve got some practice, it’s really not that hard at all. The steps are logical, they just take some practice. One of the most visually impressive tie-dye patterns ever is the mandala fold, but clear instructions can be a little bit elusive. ![]()
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