The Effect of pH on Yellow Dyes from the Garden

yellows on line

First of all, I know that my well water is acidic. It measures about pH 6.0 here in the mountains of North Carolina.  The water is ideal for most dyeing. There is no iron or other minerals that might dull the colors. The acidity is another issue. 

Most of the yellow dyes in my garden, or those that I might gather locally, are flavonoids. That means that they require a mordant in order to attach to the textile. No mordant means no yellow. It’s that simple. Some of the dyes may also contain some tannin or other colorants but the yellow is what we’re talking about here. 

Last summer Joy Boutrup and I taught a class together at Penland School of Crafts, located near my home in western North Carolina. A student in the class was especially interested in gathering local plants for use as a dye source. She struggled to get the locally gathered dyes to attach to her textiles, especially onto mordanted cotton. 

Joy had the answer-of course!

When the dye meets the mordant in a textile, an insoluble lake is formed. This lake is formed most readily in neutral or slightly alkaline conditions.

An alum mordant makes a very strong bond with wool but there is no chemical bond between cellulose and the mordant.  Instead, the mordant is deposited as an insoluble compound on the textile.

An additional issue is that many of our local plants are acidic. When the plants are boiled in our already acidic water, the pH of the dyebath becomes so low that the dye may struggle to attach to the mordant in the fiber. In fact, the mordant in the cotton can be damaged or even removed if the bath is acidic enough. This is exactly the reason why we don’t add an acid to a cochineal bath when dyeing cellulose. The mordant would be damaged and little dye attaches. 

The remedy: Add a small amount of chalk (calcium carbonate) to the dye bath to neutralize the acid that is present. This will do no damage to the dye or the textile. Chalk is not an alkaline but will neutralize an acid that is present. Within reason, there is no possibility of having too much chalk and any excess will simply precipitate in the bath and rinse out of the fabric

Since my own broom (Genista tinctoria) is currently in need of a serious trim, I began a series of flavonoid dye tests with that and then compared other dyes from my garden and environs. 

I used all fresh plants at 300% w.o.f. and dyed both wool and cotton. The wool was mordanted in alum. The cotton was mordanted using tannin plus alum and soda ash. After making the dye decoction, I divided the dye bath in two equal portions and added both wool and cotton to each bath.  Chalk was added to only one of the baths.

The results were quite surprising (but also very consistent) and made me realize that I have likely not been achieving the maximum amount of color from some of my local dyes. 

The plants I gathered and used were

    • Broom (Genista tinctoria)
    • Wild grape leaves
    • Apple leaves
    • Dyer’s Chamomile (Anthemis tinctoria). I used the flowers and after gathering a basket of the small flowers I tested the dye content in the entire plant. 
    • Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhena) . We often think of sumac as a good source of tannin but the leaves, according to Dominique Cardon, are also rich in flavonoids. 
    • Weld (Reseda luteola). This is my “go-to” yellow dye. I almost always use dried plants and I rarely add chalk with weld on cotton but frequently  add it to a wool bath. 

After boiling the plant material I recorded the pH of the decoction. The pH was measured again after the addition of chalk. Each dye bath was approximately 4 liters and I added about 1 TBS of chalk. 

The chalk will alter the appearance of the bath from transparent to cloudy and nearly opaque. 

weld in pot w/wo chalk
Weld baths: no chalk on left, chalk added on right
plant pH after boiling pH after addition of chalk
Dyer’s broom 

(Genista tinctoria)

5 6
Wild grape leaves 4 6
Apple leaves 5 6.5
Dyer’s chamomile (Anthemis tinctoria) (flowers) 4.5 6.5
Dyer’s chamomile (Anthemis tinctoria) (whole plant) 4.5 6.5
Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhena) 4 6
Weld (fresh plant) (Reseda luteola) 5.5 6.5
Weld (dried plant) 5.5 6.5

The samples below are wool. Individual samples on the left had chalk added to the bath. Those on the right did not.

In every case, I achieved  deeper and brighter yellows colors when the chalk was added to the fresh plant baths. The only exception was dried weld, which was used at 50% w.o.f. When dyeing with the fresh weld plants, deeper yellow hues resulted with the addition of chalk. When I used dried weld plants, the chalk made very little difference.  I asked Joy about this and she indicated that is was possible that some of the acids disappear in the drying process. It will require more tests and explorations to confirm this.

The cellulose samples are especially notable. The high acidity of some baths made without the chalk was enough to damage the mordant significantly. The grape leaves and the sumac, which were the most acidic, destroyed the mordant in the cellulose and only the tannins that are present in the leaf were able to attach and color the fabric. 

cellulose no chalk
Palette of color on cotton without the addition of  chalk.  Left to right: Chamomile flowers, broom, apple leaves, chamomile (whole plant), weld, sumac, grape leaves
cellulose with chalk
Palette of color on cotton with the use of chalk.  Left to right: Chamomile flowers, broom, apple leaves, chamomile (whole plant), weld, sumac, grape leaves

If your water is not acidic, or has calcium in it, then these tests may not be relevant but the addition of chalk will never harm the fiber or the dye and may release more color.

I recently found the following note that I had made during a class with Michel Garcia several years ago referring to grape leaves:

“If they are too sour they will dissolve part of the mordant.”       M. Garcia

 My own notes continue to say:

After boiling the grape leaves the solution of a pH 4 – too acidic – it will remove the mordants. Sumac will cause the same effect. Boiling breaks the bonds of the tannins and gallic acid is released. Add chalk to the bath to decrease the acidity of the dye bath – you cannot be in excess of chalk.

Sometimes we’re just not ready to absorb information the first time we hear it. This is exactly why I continue to question, keep notes, and actively test and observe. 

It’s summertime! Enjoy your yellow flavonoids!

Note: I purchase my chalk from a potter’s supply store. It is inexpensive and can be purchased in quantity. Potters refer to it a “whiting” and rarely refer to it as chalk or calcium carbonate. Do check the MSDS though, just to be sure. 

Upcoming: On July 13 I am presenting a Zoom webinar, entitled Colors from the Garden, as part of the John C. Campbell Folks School’s Appalachian Traditions Series. You can sign up here:

Weld (Reseda luteola)

I recently presented a program at the NC  Arboretum on weld (Reseda luteola). There is a growing interest in natural dyes in our local region and I was hoping to inspire dyers to begin growing their own. A few days before the program, I was asked by a local dyer why I was not talking about native plants such as broom straw or goldenrod, which were both seasonably available at that time. It was a good question. It question deserved some serious thought.

These are the reasons I chose to encourage dyers to use weld:

  • It is considered one of the “classical dyes”, that has been used by dyers for centuries. It is the oldest documented source of yellow and was used by both the Greeks and the Romans.

    Weld on cotton with tannin and aluminum acetate mordant
    Weld on cotton with tannin and aluminum acetate mordant
  • I have observed that it is more lightfast than any natural yellow dye I’ve used. I have performed lightfast tests and it has outperformed any natural yellow dye I have compared it to.
Recent lightfast tests using yellows harvested from my garden, August, 2015. Weld (Reseda luteola), Saw-wort (Serratula tinctoria), and Dyer’s broom (Genista tinctoria) all contain the same colorant, luteolin
Recent lightfast tests using yellow dyes on cotton. All were harvested from my garden, August, 2015. Weld (Reseda luteola), Saw-wort (Serratula tinctoria), and Dyer’s broom (Genista tinctoria) all contain the same colorant, luteolin
  • When combined with alum mordant it produces a brilliant, clear yellow. When combined with indigo it  results in lively, grassy greens. The smallest amount of iron will turn the color to olive green.
    IMG_6949
    Indigo + weld

    Weld + .5% iron on cotton and linen
    Weld + .5% iron on cotton and linen
  • Weld is native to Eurasia but it grows very easily in our NC mountain climate and region (zone 6). It has weathered both mild and very cold winters. I have grown a crop of weld for the last 5 years. Each year I harvest approximately 5-6 pounds of dry dye material from a 4’x8’ raised bed in the garden. That is plenty for my own work and enough to share with the classes I teach. There are also seeds to share.

    Weld will grown over 6 feet tall the second year
    Weld will grown over 6 feet tall the second year
  • A small amount of weld goes a long way. Dried plant material is used at 50% weight of dry fiber and results in very strong color, with plenty of dye left in the pot for over-dyeing other colors.

    Weld + indigo, used with woven shibori resists
    Weld + indigo, used with woven shibori resists
  • Weld is not fussy about its soil and will grown readily wherever the seeds land, though it is not considered an invasive plant.

    Weld seedlings in the gravel outside my studio, where I strip the plants after drying
    Weld seedlings in the gravel outside my studio, where I strip the plants after drying
  • Weld can be difficult and expensive to obtain. There are not many sources where weld can be purchased, either in extract or plant form.  Growing and drying the dyestuff makes sense for the studio dyer.

    Dried weld (leave and flowers) stored for later use and the discarded stems, which don’t contain much dye.
    Dried weld (leave and flowers) stored for later use and the discarded stems, which don’t contain much dye.

All of the attendees at the program left with a small packet of weld seeds. I have already heard from several people that their seeds have sprouted. Weld is a biennial. the plants will establish themselves this fall and then grow to 6’ or more next summer when they go to seed. Then they will be ready to harvest and dry for future use. The seeds will self sow and others can be gathered from the plants

When plants are hung upside down to dry, it is easy to harvest seeds
When plants are hung upside down to dry, it is easy to harvest seeds
Seedlings coming up in the garden today. These self sowed from the plants.
Seedlings coming up in the garden today. These self sowed from the plants.