Color: Lac Black Content: 8 oz. With this dye you will also need: 0. Details Dyeing. Do you have any questions concerning this product? Add to wish list Hinweis: Die Mehrwertsteuer wird nach Lieferland berechnet.
Our website uses cookies. Some of them are technically necessary for the functionality of the shop. Ahmedabad, Gujarat. Kangra Khasra No. Sidhpur Dharamshala Dharamshala, Kangra - , Dist. Kangra, Himachal Pradesh.
Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh. Verified Supplier. Pandesara, Surat Plot No. Pandesara, Pandesara, Surat - , Dist. Surat, Gujarat. Vatva, Vadodara - , Dist. Vadodara, Gujarat. Naroda, Ahmedabad Plot No. Mumbai, Maharashtra. Near Bhachau, Anjar, Dist. Kachchh, Gujarat. It is heavily used in the leather tanning industry. Mimosa is a catechic or red-brown tannin like quebracho and cutch.
Myrobalan Myrobalan - This dyestuff consists of ground nuts of the Terminalia chebula tree. It may be classed as both a mordant and a dye, giving a light buttery yellow when applied.
It is an important tannin based mordant for cotton in India and southeast Asia due to the light warm colour it imparts to the cloth.
Myrobalan is a good foundation for overdyeing. It is also the perfect colour to lay down under a single indigo dip for teal.
Onion Skins Onion Skins - are a nice introduction to natural dyes for novices, children, and those who delight in colour from kitchen waste. Red onions give shades of clear maroon-brown on protein fibres and lighter equivalents on cellulose. Simmer for 1 hour, remove the skins and add your mordanted cloth.
For a more thorough extraction simmer for an hour then let stand overnight before dyeing. Onions skins have medium fastness. Osage Osage - consists of the shredded wood of the tree Maclura pomifera. Osage contains a yellow dye similar to fustic and black oak and yields clear, true yellows to soft yellow greens that have a high light and washfastness. Osage grows throughout the south and central United States. The tree was originally planted to help with wind erosion, the wood was used to build fences and was hard enough for wagon wheels.
Osage has overgrown many areas and is being cut down for firewood. Pomegranate Pomegranate - An extract from the rinds of pomegranates, Punica granatum , this dyestuff is high in tannin and improves the light and washfastnes of any dye with which it is mixed. In India and Southeast Asia it is used as both a dye and a mordant. Pomegranate yields soft yellows to green-yellows. Quebracho Quebracho dye comes from a tree native to South America, which is very high in tannins.
The dye can vary in colours from coral, warm red brown, yellow or green depending on the species. To deepen the quebracho colours add an alkali or iron mordant. Safflower Safflower — Carthamus tinctorious , is an annual thistle.
Yellows, surprisingly sharp pinks, orange-reds, and corals can be extracted from safflower. Soaking petals in water at room temperature gives a yellow which can be collected and used to dye any modanted natural fibre. The dyestuff occurs in minute quantities in the seed cones, and only reaches useable quantities as a byproduct of seed collection and reforestation programs. Shades achieved are beautiful but with moderate lightfastness. Sumac Sumac is a powdered dyestuff from the bark of the sumac tree.
Symplocos Symplocos is a bio-accumulator of aluminum. The leaves naturally store alum and so by harvesting the plant, drying and grinding the leaves, dyers can access an organic supply of this important mordant. Our symplocos is obtained through the Babali Foundation plantmordant. Tara Caesalpinea spinoza , commonly known as tara, is a small and thorny tree with red pods that grows in the dry areas of Peru. It belongs to the pyrogallol group. This vegetable tannin is used in the leather industry to obtain very bright and light-colored leathers.
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