When the pandemic first hit, Layla Guest imagined tie-dye as a fun project to do with her young daughter.

Her 4-year-old quickly lost interest. But Ms. Guest, 38, grew obsessed. In just a few months, the Los Angeles yoga teacher has dyed hundreds of items in her apartment, including a shower curtain, tote bags, towels, and everything white in her wardrobe.

“I can tie-dye from morning until night,” she said. “It was out of control. I definitely fell down the rabbit hole.”

Tie-dye, the counterculture emblem of the 1960s and 70s, has made a splashy comeback in 2020. Demand for dyes and do-it-yourself kits have skyrocketed as people stuck at home experiment with tie-dying everything in sight. Some are trying to make their own versions of the pricey tie-dye sweatsuits churned out by designers as a work-from-home uniform.

Dye companies are struggling to keep up, forcing industries like costume design to compete with amateur tie-dyers for limited supplies of dye. There are shortages of cheery colors such as petal pink and turquoise.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Off-duty California deputy charged in crash that killed boy was driving nearly 95 mph in school zone, authorities say

A California sheriff’s deputy was charged with murder after authorities in Los…

Monthly U.S. Budget Gap More Than Doubled in October

WASHINGTON—The federal government ran a $284 billion budget deficit in the first…

Return Scams Jump as Fraudsters Exploit E-Commerce Boom

Retailers say they are seeing a sharp increase in a type of…

No boat, no problem: Indian bride and groom sail to flood-hit wedding in cooking pot

Some brides and grooms take a limousine to their weddings, others a…