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How to Dye Fabric Using Nature’s Treasures

The process of dyeing clothes always made me curious.
I have to confess that I have thrown away a bunch of them, after a few non sucessful attempts to change their looks!
My laundry machine was always my biggest enemy, leaving behind a lot of stains on the following laundry!
I was always using the commercial dyes and the smell made me sick.
One day, someone told me that I could dye fabric naturally and I started researching.
I found a website, called The Pioneer Thinking. There I found the following rules to a successful dying process.
Try with the kids, they would love it!


So, look at your own back yard, a great source for natural dyes can be found right there!
Roots, nuts and flowers are just a few common natural ways to get many colors. Yellow, orange, blue, red, green, brown and grey are available. Go ahead, experiment!

Gathering plant material for dyeing: Blossoms should be in full bloom, berries ripe and nuts mature. Remember, never gather more than 2/3 of a stand of anything in the wild when gathering plant stuff for dying.

To make the dye solution: Chop plant material into small pieces and place in a pot. Double the amount of water to plant material. Bring to a boil, then simmer for about an hour. Strain. Now you can add your fabric to be dyed. For a stronger shade, allow material to soak in the dye overnight.

Getting the fabric ready for the dye bath: You will have to soak the fabric in a color fixative before the dye process. This will make the color set in the fabric.

Color Fixatives:
Salt Fixative (for berry dyes) 1/2 cup salt to 8 cups cold water
Plant Fixatives (for plant dyes) 4 parts cold water to 1 part vinegar
Add fabric to the fixative and simmer for an hour. Rinse the material and squeeze out excess. Rinse in cool water until water runs clear.
Dye Bath: Place wet fabric in dye bath. Simmer together until desired color is obtained. The color of the fabric will be lighter when its dry. Also note that all dyed fabric should be laundered in cold water and separately.
Muslin, silk, cotton and wool work best for natural dyes and the lighter the fabric in color, the better. White or pastel colors work the best.

NOTE: It’s best to use an old large pot as your dye vessel. Wear rubber gloves to handle the fabric that has been dyed, the dye can stain your hands. It’s also important to note, some plant dyes may be toxic, check with the Poison Control Center if unsure.

Shades Of Orange


Shades Of  Brown
Bloodroot will give a good orange to reddish orange color.
Sassafras (leaves)
Onion skin
Lichen (gold)
– Carrot – (roots) orange
– Lilac (twigs) – yellow/orange
Barberry (mahonia sp.) yellow orange (with alum) very strong & permanent. Any part of the plant will work.
Giant Coreopsis (Coreopsis gigantea) Yields bright permanent orange with alum.
Turmeric dyed cloth will turn orange or red if it is dipped in lye.
Pomagrante – with alum anywhere from orange to khaki green.
– Butternut – (seed husks) – orange
Wild plum root will give a reddish or rusty brown.
Oak bark will give a tan or oak color.
Sumac (leaves)
– Dandelion (roots) brown
– Broom – (bark) yellow/brown
Walnut (hulls) (deep brown)(wear gloves)
Tea Bags (light brown)
– White Birch – (inner bark) – brown
Juniper Berries
– Fennel – (flowers, leaves) – yellow/brown
Coffee Grinds
Acorns (boiled)
– Hollyhock (petals)
Colorado Fir – (bark) tan shade
Yellow dock (produces shades of brown on wool)
Beetroot (Dark Brown With FeSO4)
Red Leaf Buds (of many maple trees )- red-brown color when dried. Found on branches before new leaves appear only present during early spring and throughout fall.
– Amur Maple ( Acer Ginnala) – black, blue, bown from dried leaves.
– Ivy – (twigs) – yellow/brown
Shades Of Pink
Strawberries
Cherries
Raspberries (red)
Roses and Lavender, with a little mint and some lemon juice to activate the alkaloids can make both a brilliant pink dye and a very tasty pink lemonade.
Lichens – A pink, brown, or wine colored dye can be produced from a lichen known as British soldiers.
– Camilla –It’s a nice pink-magenta. With lemon and salt.
– Grand Fir -(bark) pink



Shades Of Blue – Purple
Shades Of  Red
Red cabbage
Woad (first year leaves). Woad gives a pale to mid blue colour depending on the type of fabric and the amount of woad used.
Mulberries (royal purple)
Elderberries (lavender)
– Saffron – (petals) blue/green
Grapes (purple)
Blueberries
– Cornflower – (petals) blue dye with alum, water
Cherry (roots)
Blackberry (fruit) strong purple
– Hyacinth – (flowers) – blue
Japanese indigo (deep blue)
Red Cedar Root (purple)
– Raspberry –(fruit) purple/blue
Red Maple Tree (purple)(inner bark)
– Nearly Black Iris – (dark bluish purple) alum mordant
– Dogwood – (fruit) greenish-blue
– Oregon Grape –(fruit) blue/purple
Red leaves will give a reddish brown color I use salt to set the dye.
Sumac (fruit) (light red)
Dandelion (root)
Beets (deep red)
– Crab Apple – (bark) – red/yellow
Rose (hips)
Chokecherries
Madder
Hibiscus Flowers (dried)
Kool-aid
– Canadian Hemlock – (bark) reddish brown
– Japanese Yew – (heartwood) – brown dye
Wild ripe Blackberries
– Brazilwood
– St. John’s Wort – (whole plant) soaked in alcohol – red

Shades Of Gray – Black

Shades Of Red – Purple
 Iris (roots)
Sumac (leaves) (Black)
Carob pod (boiled) will give a gray to cotton
Oak galls – makes a good black dye.
Sawthorn Oak – (seed cups) – black
Pokeweed (berries)
Hibiscus (flowers)(dark red or purple ones) make a red-purple dye.
Daylilies (old blooms)
– Safflower – (flowers, soaked in alcohol) – red
Logwood (is a good purple but you have to watch it as it dyes quick when the pot is fresh. Also it exhausts fast. We use alum to mordant and using iron can give you logwood gray.)
Huckleberry gives a good lavender color and I have used it not only for a dye but also for ink.
Shades Of Green

Shades Of Peach/Salmon
Artemisia species provide a range of greens from baby’s breath to nettle green.
– Artichokes
– Tea Tree – (flowers) green/black
Spinach (leaves)
– Sorrel (roots) – dark green
– Foxglove – (flowers) apple green
– Lilac – (flowers) – green
– Camellia – (pink, red petals) – green
– Snapdragon – (flowers) – green
Black-Eyed Susans
Grass (yellow green)
– Pigsweed (entire plant) yellow green
– Red Pine (needles) green
Nettle
– Broom – (stem) green
– Larkspur – green – alum
Plantain Roots
– White Ash – (bark) – yellow
– Purple Milkweed – (flowers & leaves) – green
Lily-of-the-valley (light green) be careful what you do with the spent dye bath. The plant is toxic so try to avoid pouring it down the drain into the water supply.
Barberry root (wool was dyed a greenish bronze-gold)
Red onion (skin) (a medium green, lighter than
forest green)

– Yarrow – (flowers) yellow & green shades
– Mulga Acacia – (seed pods) – green
– Peach – (leaves) yellow/green
– Coneflower (flowers) – green
Broom Flower
Virginia Creeper (all parts); alum mordant; Peach.
Achiote powder (annatto seed
Plum tree (roots) (salmon color on wool with alum)
Weeping Willow (wood & bark) makes a peachy brown (the tannin
acts as a mordant)

– Virgina Creeper – (fruit) – pink

Shades Of Yellow/Wheat


Saffron (stigmas) – yellow
Safflower (flowers, soaked in water) – yellow
– Syrian Rue (glows under black light)
Red Clover (whole blossom, leaves and stem); alum mordant; Gold.
Yellow cone flower (whole flower head); chrome mordant; Brass to Greeney-Brass.
– Onion (skins)
– Alfalfa (seeds) – yellow
Marigold (blossoms)
Willow (leaves)
Queen Anne’s Lace
– Heather – (plant) – yellow
St. John’s Wort – (flowers & leaves) – gold/yellow
Burdock
Celery (leaves)
Golden Rod (flowers)
Sumac (bark) – The inner pith of Sumac branches can produce a super bright yellow color.
Weld (bright yellow)
Cameleon plant (golden)
– Mimosa – (flowers) yellow
Dandelion flower
Osage Orange also known as Bois d’arc or hedgeapple (heartwood, inner bark, wood, shavings or sawdust) (pale yellow)
Daffodil flower heads (after they have died); alum mordant
Mullen (leaf and root) pale yellow. *careful, because the little fuzzy hairs can make one itchy!
Hickory leaves (yellow) if plenty of leaves are boiled and salt added.
Tea ( ecru color)
Yellow, Curly, Bitter, or Butter Dock (despite various leaf shapes, all have a bright yellow taproot) gives you a yellow/flesh color.
White mulberry tree (bark) Cream color onto white or off-white wool. Alum mordant.
Paprika ( shade of pale yellow – light orange)
Beetroot (yellow) (alum & K2Cr2O7)
Turmeric (spice) –bright yellow
Oxallis – the one with the yellow flowers. Use the flower heads, some stem ok. It is nearly fluorescent yellow, and quite colorfast on alum mordanted wool.
Dahlia Flowers (Red, yellow, orange flowers) make a lovely yellow to orange dye for wool.
Mulga Acacia -(flowers) – yellow
– Sunflowers – (flowers) – yellow
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