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Most ice dye tutorials swear you need fleece under your project to get good dye flow — so I decided to test that idea on two bucket hats using the same colors, the same fold, and the same incline setup. What I learned surprised me. Fleece DOES matter when you're doing most tall deep scrunch projects. Here's a full playlist of some of those project ides: • Tall Deep Scrunch (TDS) Tutorials In this video, I’m not just making cute hats, I’m breaking down what actually controls ice dye movement, and why absorbent layers like fleece didn’t matter at all in this setup. In this experiment, you’ll see: What happened when I removed fleece from the setup (spoiler: nothing changed) How incline + gravity created the flowy dye movement Why light-handed dye application prevents muddy blends How I protected the metal hardware on the hats from soda ash damage My full rinse process for keeping colors vibrant and clean Dyes used (Dharma Trading Co.): Seafoam, Teal Blue, Himalayan Salt, Spanish Lavender, and Be More Specific (I also share close color swaps in the video if these are sold out.) ✨ Want to try more folds and dye setups? Download my free ebook with 12 of my favorite tie dye folds: https://practicalandpretty.myflodesk.... 🛍 Shop my one-of-a-kind tie dye: https://www.etsy.com/shop/Practicalan... 🛒 My favorite tie dye supplies: https://www.amazon.com/shop/annamcnam... 💬 Have questions about ice dye flow, setup, or color choices? Drop them in the comments — I love troubleshooting dye projects with you.