>>7851441sure
buy the following:
A small saucepan (or bigger, depending on how much you're trying to dye)
RIT dye (you can find it at walmart in the thread/knitting section)
a soft-plastic toothed ladle
plastic knives/forks/spoons
Fill the saucepan with enough water to submerge the parts. Set it on a stovetop and set it to a low heat (not the lowest, either 2 or 3 will do), you don't want this boiling. After the water's gotten sufficiently hot, pour a generous amount of dye in and stir it for a while using a plastic utensil. Let it sit for a couple minutes
Carefully drop your parts into the dye and use the ladle to keep them submerged, as the heat will force them to the top. You want to keep the parts moving around inside the dye without letting them sit in one spot. Try to avoid letting them rest against the pan itself to avoid the plastic melting or deforming. Around 10 minutes of doing this, the plastic should have absorbed the dye, use the ladle to bring the parts up to take a good look at them.
Once the parts look good, remove them from the dye and set them down somewhere to dry. After drying, there's going to be some residual dye residue, use a wet paper towel to clean this off as best you can.
My best advice is to take your time with this, and leave plenty of room to move.