Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
h a l f b a k e r y
I like this idea, only I think it should be run by the government.

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Temporary T-shirt Printing

when you want to make a statement, but only for a bit
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we've all seen those Velcro t-shirts where you can rearrange the letters, but eventually the bits get lost. I'm suggesting iron-on temporary letters (and punctuation of course), that let you make a statement that might be poignant today but tomorrow you'll wish would just wash out when you clean the t-shirt - these do exactly that.

"I haven't slept with David Beckham"
"I went to the t-shirt shop and all I got were these lousy temporary letters"
"Rumsfeld for President !"
neilp, May 10 2004

(??) Interactive T-Shirt http://www.cuckoode...k/product.asp?id=73
Write your message. Wash it off. Write another message etc. [DrBob, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]

[link]






       What's the mechanism?
jutta, May 10 2004
  

       thanks [zanzibar] - I reckon you could get letters which biodegrade on contact withe the kind of enzymes in washing powder - you wouldn't want the letters leaking in the rain or discotheque now would you ?
neilp, May 10 2004
  

       she's up and left us [z], in mid anno....
neilp, May 10 2004
  

       Do non-biological washing powders still contain the enzymes to which you refer [neilp]? If not then I suggest they are not appropriate.   

       You could always bolt an etch-a-sketch to the front!
dobtabulous, May 10 2004
  

       "Rum __ for ________lent"?
neilp, May 10 2004
  

       [dob] - nah I think that's what makes them non-bio, but I'm sure there's a way....
neilp, May 10 2004
  

       Biological washing powders contain stuff like proteases don't they? So a protein based paper would be needed which wouldn't be good for ironing!   

       You could make it out of cellulose and have a sachet of cellulase to add to your wash.   

       Nice idea(l) though
hazel, May 10 2004
  

       Or, of course, statement T-shirts that change in the wash to say something completely different, as selected parts of the design wash out.
DrCurry, May 10 2004
  

       I'm with __u___. ---->
lintkeeper2, May 10 2004
  

       The threads in the fabric already form a cross point matrix. Could you do it electronically by putting electronic-paper dye on the crosspoints?
kbecker, May 10 2004
  

       Baked. Only yesterday I was pondering a purchase, for one of my many nieces, of just such an item <see link>. It's not quite as freeform as you want, neilp, but I reckon that it can easily be adapted.
DrBob, May 11 2004
  

       What? No Velcro skull patches?
Letsbuildafort, May 11 2004
  

       Henna ink cartridges.
bristolz, May 11 2004
  

       Proposed Mechanism : You'll need a stencil set, a bottle of spray on starch and a spray bottle of weak solution iodine.   

       Starch stencil the slogan   

       Iodine spray over the t-shirt.   

       Your slogan is then revealed in wonderful Prussian blue. Simply wash to remove the slogan or spray a fixer to keep.
jonthegeologist, May 13 2004
  
      
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