Falcone wrote:Fade over how much time? I dyed a figure black 2-3 years ago and he hasn't begun to fade yet.
Theres got to be some type of chemical that can be applied to the figure that will burn the color and lighten it up.
It really depends on how long you dyed them for, type of plastic, environment, and, I'm fairly convinced, luck. I have a Slice custom I RIT dyed over two years ago that still looks fine, but I have a 25th Serpentor I dyed earlier this year that is already starting to fade a bit.
And no, unfortunately, there's not a chemical that will strip the coloring out of plastic. Not bleach, not paint thinner, definitely not acetone, not the RIT dye fabric dye remover. The problem is that dye works a lot different than paint. It absorbs into the plastic to change the color, it doesn't just coat the plastic with color. So if the plastic starts out dark, adding color to it will only make it darker. It's basically the same idea as why you can't change a yellowed Storm Shadow/Clone Trooper/Storm Trooper back to white (no matter what some people say).
What parts are you working with, specifically? Is there a possibility that they are figure parts that were rereleased in lighter colors? If you're trying to dye joints, would it be possible to swap out parts of the joints (like the center disk in shoulder joints or the swivel in elbows) for similar parts in lighter colors (really easy to do if you're working with new sculpt, possible to do with ARAH, more difficult with 25th or the later injection-molded new sculpt parts)? If you're absolutely stuck using the green parts, dyeing to light tan probably isn't going to work at all, so I'd recommend just making sure you use good paints (I strongly recommend Model Masters or Tamiya) and sand any areas that will be prone to rubbing before hand.