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      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Fructose Indigo Vat
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      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Henna Indigo Vat
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Indigo
    • How to Scour
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      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Acetate
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      • Cochineal Insect Instructions
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      • Rhubarb Root Instructions
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      • Sappanwood Sawdust Instructions
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    • How to Dye With Liquid Natural Dyes
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Aquarelle Liquid Natural Dyes
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Botanical Colors
  • Shop
    • Re:COLOR
      • Re:COLOR Terms and Conditions
    • New Products
    • Natural Dyes
    • Natural Dye Extracts
    • Liquid Natural Dyes
    • Raw Natural Dye Materials
    • Mordants and Assists
    • Fabrics and Dyeables
    • Kits + Bundles
    • Books
    • Sale
  • Re:COLOR
  • Learn
    • Workshops & Online Classes
    • Event Calendar
    • Sustainable Team Building Events and Corporate Gifts
  • Journal
    • Mordant Monday
    • Sunday Visit
    • FEEDBACK FRIDAY Videos
  • Info
    • New To Natural Dyes?
    • Recipes
    • How to Dye with Indigo
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Fructose Indigo Vat
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Iron Indigo Vat
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Henna Indigo Vat
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Indigo
    • How to Scour
    • How to Mordant
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Acetate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Potassium Sulfate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Sulfate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Triformate
      • How to Mordant with Symplocos
      • How to Mordant with Tannin and Alum
      • How to use Iron Powder (Ferrous Sulfate)
    • How to Dye with Natural Dye Extracts
    • How to Dye with Raw Materials
      • Cochineal Insect Instructions
      • Dye Flower Instructions
      • Dye Mushroom Instructions
      • Fruitwood Chips Instructions
      • Logwood Chip Instructions
      • Madder Root Instructions
      • Marigold Flower Instructions
      • Oak Gall Instructions
      • Onion Skin Instructions
      • Osage Orange Sawdust Instructions
      • Pericón Instructions
      • Pomegranate Peel Instructions
      • Rhubarb Root Instructions
      • Safflower Instructions
      • Sappanwood Sawdust Instructions
      • Walnut Powder Instructions
    • How to Dye With Liquid Natural Dyes
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Aquarelle Liquid Natural Dyes
    • How to use Print Paste Thickener
    • How to check pH
  • About
    • About Us, What We Do
    • Our Dyehouse
    • General FAQs
    • Order and Shipping FAQs
    • Contact Us
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The Latest from our blog

Mordant Monday: Kakishibu (Persimmon Tannin)

July 7, 2025July 7, 2025

MORDANT MONDAY: How To Reuse A Tannin Bath

June 30, 2025June 30, 2025

Mordant Monday: Middle Mordant in Toronto

June 23, 2025June 23, 2025

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botanicalcolors

Ancient dyes for modern times. Your resource for natural dyes, education and natural dye production.

Summertime Yellows! Have you tried our weld? Wel Summertime Yellows! 

Have you tried our weld? Weld (Reseda luteola) is the most lightfast of the yellow dyes. Ancient tapestry weavers in Central Asia, Turkey and Europe used the dye.

Weld is the brightest and clearest yellow flower dye. In combination with iron, weld creates a rich chartreuse or, when overdyed with indigo, yields a clear lime green. We carry a very fine grade of weld extract that is also certified for organic textile processing in compliance with the Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS).

25g of weld extract will dye approximately 800g (1.75 pounds) of fiber to a dark yellow shade. Adding a pinch of soda ash and calcium carbonate to weld while you are dissolving it deepens the shade and the color yield from the dyestuff. For more detailed instructions, please visit our page on natural dye extracts.

Did you know you could combine weld with logwood extract to make green?
There is still time to sign up for @caramariepiazz There is still time to sign up for @caramariepiazza ‘s Online Workshop: Chromatic Transformations: Natural Dye Chemistry and pH-Responsive Color Shifting on Cotton & Silk – August 9th, 2025

Starts at 12pm PST/3PM EDT 
Ends at 2:30pm pst/5:30pm EDT
Online Via Zoom : You will receive a PDF with the zoom link after purchase. 

Originally Cara’s workshop on creating cosmic night sky patterns,  Cara has now modified this workshop to include an entire range of tannin bases, along with other dyes that are susceptible to being modified with simple kitchen chemistry. A great addition to Twilight Tannins, you will build and create swatches on both Cotton & Silk in this workshop. Cara will guide you through methodical approaches to dyeing and how simple changes in pH can create stunning, shifting colors on fabric.

What This Workshop Is About:
Natural dyes have a unique magic, terroir and alchemical properties. Many of them change color depending on their chemical environment. In this class, you’ll learn how to work with these dyes in a thoughtful, hands-on way, experimenting with acids and alkalis to shift colors and create beautiful, otherworldly surface designs inspired by our galaxy.

Click the link in our stories to sign up.
#botanicalcolors #ph #naturaldye #naturaldyeworkshop
We are so excited to announce our new Community Y. We are so excited to announce our new Community Y.A.K.A! This time the "K" stands for a special guest, @Katrinarodabaugh! Our theme this month is up-cycling and re-working and re-dyeing your clothes to prepare your fall wardrobe. Katrina is a mending expert, author and incredible natural dyer. She is the author of Make, Thrift, Mend & Mending Matters. 

Our next session is August 29th, 2025 9am PST / 12pm EST. This zoom session is entirely FREE! Come with your mending questions for Katrina, and learn all about her amazing books. We are so lucky to have her and you are too.

To register, please click the link in our bio. We can't wait to see you there!

Please note by signing up, your email shared with Katrina for her newsletter which is full of incredible insights into the world of mending, slow fashion and natural dyes. 

#mendingmatters #botanicalcolors #katrinarodabaugh #communityyaka
Handwoven Hemp-Cotton Yardage This handwoven-hemp Handwoven Hemp-Cotton Yardage

This handwoven-hemp-cotton-yardage fabric is handwoven in rural Romanian villages from locally grown, processed and spun hemp. The fabric is vintage and no longer being produced. The towels are a sturdy plain weave in a hemp cotton blend. These towels are wonderful for the bath or kitchen and grow softer with use. They are also great for dyeing, printing or painting with natural dyes.

Sold in one yard increments.  If you’d like more than one yard, simply increase the number of yards and we will send you one length of fabric. The fabric is 14-16 inches wide.

Hemp possesses great strength, softness and durability while its weight and drape are similar to linen and the fabric softens with age and use. Of course, it dyes beautifully. Our handwoven hemp-cotton yardage is handwoven in rural Romanian villages from locally grown, processed and spun hemp. This fabric is vintage, woven between 50 and 80 years ago and may show the its age. Although this is an unused, first quality fabric, the fabric may contain storage and dye or soil marks, weaving irregularities, minor abrasion or holes and other indicators of a handwoven rurally made textile.

Check out our hemp towels!
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  • Shop
    • Re:COLOR
      • Re:COLOR Terms and Conditions
    • New Products
    • Natural Dyes
    • Natural Dye Extracts
    • Liquid Natural Dyes
    • Raw Natural Dye Materials
    • Mordants and Assists
    • Fabrics and Dyeables
    • Kits + Bundles
    • Books
    • Sale
  • Re:COLOR
  • Learn
    • Workshops & Online Classes
    • Event Calendar
    • Sustainable Team Building Events and Corporate Gifts
  • Journal
    • Mordant Monday
    • Sunday Visit
    • FEEDBACK FRIDAY Videos
  • Info
    • New To Natural Dyes?
    • Recipes
    • How to Dye with Indigo
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Fructose Indigo Vat
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Iron Indigo Vat
      • How to Make a 1-2-3 Henna Indigo Vat
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Indigo
    • How to Scour
    • How to Mordant
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Acetate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Potassium Sulfate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Sulfate
      • How to Mordant with Aluminum Triformate
      • How to Mordant with Symplocos
      • How to Mordant with Tannin and Alum
      • How to use Iron Powder (Ferrous Sulfate)
    • How to Dye with Natural Dye Extracts
    • How to Dye with Raw Materials
      • Cochineal Insect Instructions
      • Dye Flower Instructions
      • Dye Mushroom Instructions
      • Fruitwood Chips Instructions
      • Logwood Chip Instructions
      • Madder Root Instructions
      • Marigold Flower Instructions
      • Oak Gall Instructions
      • Onion Skin Instructions
      • Osage Orange Sawdust Instructions
      • Pericón Instructions
      • Pomegranate Peel Instructions
      • Rhubarb Root Instructions
      • Safflower Instructions
      • Sappanwood Sawdust Instructions
      • Walnut Powder Instructions
    • How to Dye With Liquid Natural Dyes
      • Frequently Asked Questions About Aquarelle Liquid Natural Dyes
    • How to use Print Paste Thickener
    • How to check pH
  • About
    • About Us, What We Do
    • Our Dyehouse
    • General FAQs
    • Order and Shipping FAQs
    • Contact Us