Handmade in York, PA — Each Piece One of a Kind
9 min read
·
The blank you choose for ice dye matters more than most people think. I've had customers send me photos of their first ice dye attempts — beautiful dye work, solid technique, on a cheap 50/50 poly-cotton tee from a craft store. The colors look washed out and heathered because half the fibers literally can't bond with the dye. The blank killed an otherwise good project.
I've been ice dyeing professionally since 2021 and I've tested dozens of blanks in my York, PA studio. I've dialed it down to four that I actually use and recommend, each for a different reason. This is an honest breakdown of the best blanks for ice dye: what works, what doesn't, and why I reach for each one.
Before I get into specific brands, here's what you're looking for in an ice dye blank:
If I could only use one blank for the rest of my career, it would be the Comfort Colors 1566. This is the heavyweight garment-dyed crewneck sweatshirt that built my wholesale business and that I reach for more than any other blank in my studio.
The Comfort Colors 1566 is garment-dyed, which means the blank was already dyed (in this case, white) after construction. This process gives the cotton a slightly open, textured fiber structure that absorbs Procion MX dye beautifully. The heavyweight cotton (approximately 9.5 oz) provides substantial fiber for the melting ice to travel through, producing deep, layered patterns with rich color saturation.
The broken-in softness that Comfort Colors is known for comes from the garment-dyeing process. The fabric has already been through multiple wash cycles before it ever reaches your hands. For ice dye, this is a double benefit: the soft hand feel that customers love, plus a fiber structure that takes dye like a sponge.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Premium ice dye pieces, wholesale orders, crewneck sweatshirts, and any project where you want maximum color impact. This is the blank that commands the highest retail pricing.
The Bella Canvas 3001 is my go-to for ice-dyed tee shirts. It's a different animal than the Comfort Colors: lighter weight, modern fit, and a cotton-poly blend that produces a distinctly different aesthetic.
The 3001 is a 4.2 oz tee with a cotton-poly blend (typically 52/48 or similar depending on the color). The cotton fibers absorb the Procion MX dye while the polyester fibers don't, creating a naturally muted, vintage-looking result. Some dyers consider this a drawback. I consider it a design feature. The slightly heathered effect gives ice dye on Bella Canvas a softer, more understated look that appeals to a younger boutique demographic who wants something subtler than full-saturation tie dye.
The retail-quality fit is the other major selling point. Bella Canvas designed this shirt to fit like something you'd buy at a clothing store, not a craft fair. The silhouette is modern (not boxy, not too slim) and the fabric drapes well. When you ice dye a 3001, the finished product looks and feels like a premium retail tee.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Tee shirts, lighter ice dye pieces, vintage/muted color palettes, and customers who prioritize fit over maximum color impact.
The Gildan 18000 is my choice for heavyweight crewneck sweatshirts when I need an affordable option. It's not as soft as Comfort Colors and it's not garment-dyed, but it absorbs dye well and the price point makes it accessible for beginners and practical for budget-conscious wholesale orders.
The 18000 is a 50/50 cotton-poly heavy blend crewneck. The cotton fibers bond with Procion MX just fine, and the heavyweight construction gives you good pattern complexity from the slow ice melt. The 50/50 blend means you'll get a heathered effect similar to the Bella Canvas, but on a heavier, bulkier garment.
Where the Gildan really shines is price point. For a dyer just starting out, ruining a $5 Gildan while you learn the technique stings a lot less than ruining a $15 Comfort Colors. And for wholesale orders where the client needs a lower retail price, Gildan blanks let you hit a more accessible price point while still delivering a quality ice-dyed product.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Beginners learning the technique, budget wholesale orders, practice pieces, and situations where price point matters more than premium feel.
If you're dyeing for kids, or stocking a boutique with children's apparel, the Rabbit Skins 3321 is the blank to use. It's a toddler fine jersey tee designed specifically for the little ones.
The 3321 is 100% cotton (in the white colorway), which means full dye absorption and vibrant color with no heathering. The fine jersey weight is lighter than my adult crewnecks, but for a small garment, there's still plenty of fiber for the ice to work with. And honestly, parents go crazy for ice-dyed kids' apparel because every piece is unique. It's something special that no other kid at daycare is wearing.
Pros:
Cons:
Best for: Toddler and small kids' ice dye apparel, boutiques with a children's section, and any dyer who wants to add kids' pieces to their product line.
| Blank | Fiber Content | Weight | Dye Absorption | Fit | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comfort Colors 1566 | 100% cotton | Heavyweight | Excellent | Relaxed/oversized | $$$ |
| Bella Canvas 3001 | Cotton-poly blend | Midweight | Good (muted tones) | Modern retail fit | $$ |
| Gildan 18000 | 50/50 cotton-poly | Heavyweight | Moderate | Boxy/utilitarian | $ |
| Rabbit Skins 3321 | 100% cotton | Fine jersey | Excellent | Toddler sizing | $ |
If you're just getting started with ice dye and want to learn the technique without a huge investment, buy a few Gildan 18000 crewnecks and practice. They're cheap, they take dye well enough to see results, and you won't feel terrible if your first few attempts don't turn out.
Once you're confident in your technique and ready to produce pieces you'd actually sell or wear proudly, switch to Comfort Colors 1566 for crewnecks and Bella Canvas 3001 for tees. The quality difference is noticeable: in the dye results, in the hand feel, in the fit, and in how customers respond.
If you're running a boutique and sourcing ice-dyed apparel rather than dyeing it yourself, the blank choice is part of what you should evaluate in a supplier. At Floorboard Findings, every piece in our ready-to-ship collection and preorder collection is dyed on Comfort Colors or Bella Canvas blanks. That's a deliberate choice. These are the blanks that I'd buy as a customer, so they're the blanks I dye as a maker.
You'll see ice dyers on social media using all kinds of blanks: Next Level, Alternative Apparel, Champion, even thrifted tees. Most of these can work if they have sufficient cotton content. The four blanks above are the ones I've tested extensively, trust for consistent results, and use in my own production.
A few blanks to avoid for ice dye:
I source my blanks from wholesale distributors: SanMar, S&S Activewear, and alphabroder are the big three in the blank apparel industry. If you're buying in small quantities for personal projects, you can find Comfort Colors and Bella Canvas blanks at Jiffy Shirts or through Amazon (though verify the seller is reputable).
If you don't want to deal with sourcing blanks at all, our DIY Ice Dye Boxes include a pre-selected blank along with Procion MX dye, soda ash, and everything else you need. It's the easiest way to get started without tracking down individual supplies.
Want to dive deeper into the actual dyeing process? Head over to our complete beginner's guide to ice dye for a full step-by-step walkthrough from soda ash soak to final rinse.

Maria Budziszewski
Owner & Creator
Every piece is hand-dyed with care in York, PA. From ice dye hoodies to crystal jewelry, each item is crafted to be one-of-a-kind.
Meet the creator →Love what you see?
Shop our handmade ice dye apparel, graphic tees, and crystal jewelry.
Browse CollectionsMore from the Journal
TutorialsJune 1, 2026
Maria Budziszewski
·9 min read
Fifteen ice dye color combinations organized by mood, plus the science of Procion MX color splitting. From warm sunset palettes to cool ocean tones, these are the combos I reach for in my studio.
TutorialsJuly 1, 2026
Maria Budziszewski
·5 min read
A full walkthrough of everything inside our DIY Ice Dye Box — from Procion MX dye and soda ash to premium blanks and gloves — plus tips for making the most of your first dye day.
TutorialsJune 15, 2028
Maria Budziszewski
·7 min read
Embroidery and DTF printing are not competing methods — they serve different purposes. Here is a practical breakdown of when each one is the right choice for your custom apparel project.