The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide
The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result

July 4 TriCap Kennedy Community School Mechanical Energy Systems Woodcrest of Country Manor
Home Opinion Column

Tie-dye T-shirts have meaningful history

Dennis Dalman by Dennis Dalman
July 13, 2012
in Column, Sartell – St. Stephen, St. Joseph
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Candi Vlasaty

I look like a mad scientist on the verge of a monumental discovery when I create my tie-dye works of art. I spend hours tying elaborate knots in T-shirts as if I were practicing some form of torture. I place the dye meticulously on each shirt in its designated design.

Husband Kermit and son Chase give me a wide berth, wondering if I’m Dr. Jekyll or Mrs. Hyde. I mix powders and liquids as though they were potions for a long-awaited cure to something or other. And in a way, they were.

For about 60 years, tie-dye T-shirts have symbolized freedom. They are not the standard red, white and blue official symbol. They are explosions of color in riotous designs, and they symbolize freedom of expression. That is a right we demanded when America declared independence from European oppresssion.

It is a right we used in the 1960s when almost an entire generation of Americans declared independence from American conformity and oppression. Tie-dyeing clothing was a small part of an unacknowledged exploding American movement.

Before that movement, we lived in a black-and-white world. Everything was cut-and-dried, men had jobs, women raised children, men wore pants, women wore skirts. It was the Dwight D. Eisenhower era, 1952 to 1960.

Even television, so new, was also black and white. John F. Kennedy was a light at the end of the tunnel until his light was snuffed out mysteriously. He was followed by the shadowy Lyndon B. Johnson years until we fell under the suspicion of the Nixon administration (1963 to 1973), the decade of distrust.

Few believed any longer in Donna Reed, or that Father knew best, and they weren’t gonna Leave it to Beaver anymore. The nuclear family exploded in a hail of bullets shot by soldiers during a peaceful Kent State University protest, and the American movement began. Nothing was simply black-and-white ever again.

It was the Age of Aquarious and men grew their hair as long as women’s. Women burned their bras in protest of their expected lot in life. Freedom went on a rampage in a riot of psychedelic colors, drugs and music. College students participated in protests and sit-ins in a form of organized chaos to rally against the draft which forced young men to fight in wars we didn’t even officially call wars. There wasn’t even a choice back then. You were either in college or drafted.

The college-age generation found a choice and made it perfectly clear they were not going to march to anyone’s drum. They hitch-hiked to a concert in New York called Woodstock or to the Haight-Ashbury district in California. They continued hitch-hiking around the country and some just up and left the country. It was all in an effort to promote peace, abolish the draft and protest war. Peace signs, tie-dyed clothing and slogans like “Make love not war” were everywhere. I think my favorite was “War is not healthy for children and other living things.”

I was 10 years old in 1969 when my only brother’s (draft) number came up. It was terrifying and everyone cried and I didn’t understand. I still recall ducking under desks at school, tucking my head down and occasionally darting to fall-out shelters in case of air raids or worse. I did understand the Korean war was now a police action and the Vietnam police action was soon to be a war. I didn’t want to duck and run anymore. I didn’t want everyone to cry or my brother to leave. I, too, wanted peace.

My brother went to Korea for about 20 years. We were lucky. We got him back. Way too many people weren’t that lucky. An unknown number of loved ones never came back. I think tie-dyed clothes and peace signs are an ongoing memorial to them and to the generation that stood up for itself and exercised its right to freedom from oppression and freedom of expression.

Previous Post

Art is joyful therapy to membrs of ‘We-R-Artists’

Next Post

‘Holdingford Daze’ set for July 13-14

Dennis Dalman

Dennis Dalman

Dalman was born and raised in South St. Cloud, graduated from St. Cloud Tech High School, then graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in English (emphasis on American and British literature) and mass communications (emphasis on print journalism). He studied in London, England for a year (1980-81) where he concentrated on British literature, political science, the history of Great Britain and wrote a book-length study of the British writer V.S. Naipaul. Dalman has been a reporter and weekly columnist for more than 30 years and worked for 16 of those years for the Alexandria Echo Press.

Next Post

'Holdingford Daze' set for July 13-14

Please login to join discussion

Murphy Granite St. Joseph Catholic School Sal's Bar Scherer Trucking Sentry Bank Serenity Place on 7th Snap Fitness

Century Link WACOSA (2) NIB (Tania & Chris) St. Cloud Ortho Auto Body 2000 Pediatric / Welch Pine Cone Pet Hospital Albany Recycling

Search

No Result
View All Result

Categories

Recent Posts

  • City of St. Stephen annual budget planning meeting
  • Regular School Board Meeting, May 19, 2025
  • Annual disclosure of Tax Increment Districts, City of Saint Joseph, Minnesota
  • Fire in Holdingford destroys garage
  • SummerFest floats range from royalty to karate

City Links

Sartell
St. Joseph
St. Stephen

School District Links

Sartell-St. Stephen school district
St. Cloud school district

Chamber Links

Sartell Chamber
St. Joseph Chamber

Community

Calendar

Citizen Spotlight

Criers

People

Notices

Funerals/Visitions

Obituary

Police Blotter

Public Notices

Support Groups

About Us

Contact Us

News Tips

Submissions

Advertise With Us

Print Advertising

Digital Advertising

2024 Promotions

Local Advertising Rates

National Advertising Rates

© 2025 Newleaders

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide

© 2025 Newleaders