Childhood RIT Dye Story

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michaelman2

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The mention of RIT Dye in another thread made me recollect a funny life story from my childhood:

In the 1960s RIT Dye was in grocery stores and always on an upper level of the detergent/laundry product aisle. Out of reach for a five year old kid. The display was filled with colorful boxes displaying the vivid dyes available.

I was fascinated with these displays (and all of the detergents and laundry items) on the aisle. I was five at the time and would beg my mother to buy a box of RIT for me. Of course she would say "no" to a five year old kid. Each week, I would look up at that display and be enthralled with the boxes displayed.

Then one fine day......we visit a convenience store and I made a beeline to the aisle with detergents and low and behold there was a RIT Dye FLOOR DISPLAY filled with the boxes of the brightly colored dyes. My Holy Grail was right there!

I promptly took a box of the purple RIT and hid it under my shirt and walked to find my mother. I was so smug and sneaky and thought I was really happy about my theft.

Got home went to my room and pulled out my contraband. Then decided to go into the bathroom, start the bathtub and open the small packet of dye that was contained in the vividly decorated box.

I had a bathtub full of purple RIT Dye. Then began to splash and play with the dye water. I was towheaded as a kid and that white blond hair was now a bright shade of purple and of course my hands, arms, and parts of my face...purple!

My mom came in and as you may imagine freaked the hell out. She rinsed my off and I think the parts that the dye did not make purple, she did when she spanked the hell out of me. She dried me off and made me go into my little savings bank and pull out a dollar and off to the convenience store we went. Me looking like a Smerf, purple skin, hair and hands.

We walked in and the man working the counter looked like he was seeing something crazy (he was), and my mother said " tell this man what you have done". So of course I tell him something to the effect of " I took this box (I had to bring the opened outer box ) of RIT dye and I am sorry.

The man was looking at my mother and kind of shaking his head and I remember him saying " oh it's fine, no problem, don't worry about it". My Mother on the other hand tells him " NO, it is not okay, he stole from you and I think you need to have him pay you for the item and if you wont call the police, maybe he can come take out the trash or some other chore for you". Of course then the water works begin and I am crying and begging him not to call the police. I also ended up taking out his trash and sweeping around the crime scene once or twice. My sentence was finally served after one or two sweeping and cleaning sessions.

Of course years later my mother and I were laughing and recounting this "traumatic" day in my life and she admitted that it was hard for her and the man at the store not to burst out laughing. She said, she knew that she had to impress upon me this was wrong (and she did). I think the weeks of purple hair and having to explain the odd look of lavender skin and purple hair when people would ask became an indelible ( pardon the pun) image in my memory.

To this day, I cringe when I see a box of "RIT" anything! Also, that ended my life of crime. I vividly (again,pardon the pun) remember that day! Fifty some odd years ago.

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Purple people

What a great story, your Mom certainly knew what she was doing and there are many who could have and should have followed her example when raising their children.

It must have been terrible waiting for that stuff to wear off, its just as well you were not familiar with this song at that young age ...



Al
 
What a wonderful story Mike!

and thanks for sharing it! Your Mom did just the right thing by making you go back to the store and tell the owner that you’d stolen from his store, make you pay for the RIT and also do some work as a penance. This is how you raise an kid to be an honest adult!

I was fascinated with Elvis Presly’s black hair when I was 12 and bought a box of Black Noreen Hair Rinse capsules for 39 cents at the five and dime store. When I got home I mixed ALL of them up in an aluminum glass and poured the mixture all over my crew cut brown hair, getting the black rinse all over the pink tiles in the bathroom, the towels, floor, my clothes, everything. Boy was my Mom ever pissed! But fortunately, she was able to wash it out with several vigorous shampoos with Breck. The stained tile and towels took considerably more effort, but eventually got clean too,

Eddie
 
my first encounter with RIT dye was my oldest sister wanted to make everything in her bedroom ensemble matching, for the most part, had to sew stuff herself, and dye to match...

if I am correct, she used 'Royal Blue'...…

what fascination it was to watch, as we had a filter flo machine, you couldn't leave the filter pan in as it would have changed color as well, in any case, a one time chance to watch this machine agitate without that pan, plus the blue water streaming from the flume....whites went in, blue came out...…

we have in town here, probably one of the few factories still in existence here, Martin Dye Corp.....way back when I was 17, and before black jeans were known, knowing a few of the guys who worked there, got to tour the place on the midnight shift....and if you took in a few pairs of denim jeans, tied them to a rope, you could drop them in the rushing water bath....in about 30 minutes you had pitch black jeans....what I wouldn't give to have a chance at this again....

right now I find it best to dye black jeans on the stove top, boiling water like at the company, a smaller tub concentrates the dye bath, plus adding salt to the water.....these table top machines are great for this, plug it in, and let it go....

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Vacbear: Believe me, had the Purple People Eater been a reality..I would have qualified for his meal! And yes, my mom did know she needed to make sure I would not forget the consequences of stealing.

In fact, for years after I was a young adult and away from home, I would open my mailbox and there would be a box of damn purple RIT Dye with a note inside from my mother " just in case you were in need of this....don't worry I paid for it!"....lol

Eddie: Thanks! You know you mentioned something that I had neglected in my original post. That bathroom looked like a Ditto machine had thrown up in it after my "play time". It took FOREVER to remove that purple hue from the grout and tile work. With your black hair dye...did you wear gloves? I would imagine that would have stained fingers, nails and anything with which it came in contact. Elvis loved the jet black hair! Remember Priscilla's hair on their wedding day?

Frig: I was like a moth to a flame with regard to the laundry / detergent aisle. I remember begging my mother to switch to Salvo tablets. Hell, Proctor and Gamble and other manufacturers did not know what they had with some of us back then, they could have had a true ad campaign with many of our members on this site and our enthusiasm regarding their products!...

Yogi: I think my first recollection of watching someone dye a garment or fabric was my grandmother. I was young and seem to remember she used a large pot (more like a cauldron, lol) for some things and I was fascinated with the process.

A funny side note: When I was in college and visiting home, I had met my mom at the hairdresser. She was having a color done and the second step in the blonding process was the toner that would process as a vivid blue/purple (canceling out any yellow /orange tones) creating an "ash" shade of blonde. Anyway, I walked over to the area where she was talking with her friends and asked " Hey mom, did you PAY for that purple dye"? We both laughed the friends and the hairdresser were a little befuddled until she proceeded to tell them about my adventure in purple.
 
Mike, fortunately, Noreen Rinse was a temporary hair coloring product, meant to wash out, so the stains came off my skin without too much difficulty. Noreen was the forerunner of Roux Fanciful rinses. It was meant to lure women into the idea of coloring their hair, when hair coloring was looked upon by many as only done by “loose” women. I was a hairdresser for 15 years, and I can’t tell you how many times I heard customers tell me that the haircoloring they had done at home was “just a rinse”, when in fact it was a permanent, aniline derivative hair color, that was no way going to wash out.

My father was an attorney, and one of the very first defendants he represented as a new attorney was a teen age boy who had stolen a pack of Beeman’s Gum from a neighborhood grocery store. This was 1952, and believe it or not the owner pressed charges, probably because the kid came from a rich family. I remember so well my dad telling me that I could go to jail for just stealing a pack of gum, and to always be honest and tell the truth.

About a year after he died, I had walked to the local Safeway, had no money, why I went there was just to look. Well, in the produce dept they had barrels of loose, penney candy. I pocketed two wrapped mint patties, and left the store, without paying. I got a block from home, and I had my fathers voice in my ear the whole way. I hadn’t eaten the mints yet. I turned around, went back to Safeway, and told the store employee that I was certain had seen my crime what I had done, and handed him back the mints, that by this time were a melted mess in their wrappers. He was so kind, told me that he was glad that I had come back and done right thing by being honest, and that he had seen me steal them. He told me that I could keep the mints, but I said no, my dad wouldn’t want me to keep them, and I’m sure he threw them away.

I sure hope that parents today are still imparting their children with this same sense of honesty and the importance of doing the right thing. The world would be a better place if all parents were like your Mom and my Dad.

And as for the song “Purple People Eater”, I vividly recall the very first time I heard this song in 1957. Our family was on our way to New Joe’s restaurant in San Rafael, Calif. We lived in Richmond, Calif., and the San Rafael Bridge had just been completed, and this was the first time I been on it. We were in my Dads. 57’ Oldsmobile 88 convertible, and had just left the toll plaza when it came on the radio. I had never heard a song like this before, and it instantly became my new favorite tune.

Sorry, to run on so much, but your story brought back all these memories, and its nice being able to share them here.

Eddie[this post was last edited: 8/16/2018-13:38]
 
Eddie, I had not known about Noreen Rinse. Remember the funny names of the Roux color program: "Pretty Beaver", " Black Rage", "Frivolous Fawn", "Bashful Blonde", "Demure Mist", "White Minx".

I remember the barrels of open candy being at the grocer. Each time I was tempted to swipe some of that candy, my RIT experience came to mind! So I can relate to the advice of your father and how it helped to mold you into being honest.

I have two adult children and when they were young they both knew I had zero tolerance for various things and misbehaving in restaurants was one of them. My son must have been three or four and we were eating in a restaurant, seated in a booth where there were two other patrons right behind us.

My son decided to stand up beside me and whine and cry about something. I turned my head to him and said " Trent either you stop this, now, or I am taking you to the restroom and I will spank you".

The woman seated behind us spun around and in a loud voice said " GOOD LORD "..I immediately turned to her and said " and YOU are NEXT".

Needless to say her husband and I almost ended up in a brawl (I know, such a great thing for my children to witness) but this long winded recollection goes to show that people need to allow a parent to PARENT.

My children were never mistreated and I think I spanked them maybe three or four times (spanked, not beat) and the mere mention of a trip to the restroom or car improved behavior dramatically.

Neither has ever been in serious trouble and they indeed know right from wrong. We are very close now and I am can be more of a friend as opposed to when they were small and needed me to be a parent.

Purple People Eater was my buddy's favorite song and we literally wore out a 45 that we played and played.

Iheartmaytag: Thanks! Believe me it took years for me to look at a RIT display...lol!
 
Mike you sound like a great dad! My parents both had a style similar to yours, and it was effective. The sentence I recall the most from early childhood if I or one of my siblings were acting up in public was, “If you keep it up, I’m going to pull your pants down and spank you on your bare butt, right here!” And we thought they really meant it, although we never put it to the test, and were never spanked in public, and seldom at home, but the threat of embarassment was enough.

And my Mom had a particularly effective tactic around Christmas. She’d pretend to be calling Santa Claus while we listened, by calling the time,” Hello, is this the North Pole, well please tell Santa not to come to our house on Christmas, unless I call back, my kids aren’t behaving”. You can well imagine our pleas for a call back to let Santa know it was OK to come to our house.

I know that now these parenting ideas would be frowned upon. But we always knew we were loved, never abused or neglected and grew up knowing right from wrong, and the importance of being courteous and respectful of others.

My brother and sister and I laugh about some of the things our parents used to say, but I guess most of us 50 or older probably had similar childhood experiences.

And I loved the “and your next line”, probably not the wisest come back, but I’ll bet it felt cathartic, made me laugh.
Eddie
 
Fun story, Michael, love the image of a purple boy crying in the store. Your mom was an honest soul and taught you well. Purple was my favorite color as a child as well, it would have been my choice.

I only remember dying things with my mom and grandmother twice. We went to the small-town laundromat and used the Speed Queen and Westinghouse coin-op washers. No purple this time, all avocado green.
 
Gansky, It was really funny looking back on it. I think one of the reasons I must have chosen the purple for my theft, it kind of matched the purple Ditto worksheets in school.

The Ditto spirit duplicators used aniline dyes on their master units / stencils and they were of course 95 percent of the time, purple in color.

Lawrence: I have asked my mom for some photos of my lavender skin and purple hair..I'll post if she comes up with something.

DADoES: I bet your dad was taken aback with you guys saying " Mommy Dyed"? LOL
 

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