Natural dye from your garden – beautiful, creative and easy
Yasmin Hossain makes natural dye from garden plants. She uses it to dye beautiful silk and wool fabrics.
These are made into throws, blankets, scarves and other accessories, available online from Juniper & Bliss which she runs with her business partner, Katty Castiau.
And I believe that grow-your-own dyes from garden plants is a trend that will grow enormously in popularity in the next few years.
It’s creative and almost anyone can do it, although there’s a certain amount of experimentation involved. But if, for example, you’re a knitter or crafter, it’s easy and exciting to dye your own wool and felt. Especially if you’re using ingredients that would otherwise be thrown away, such as vegetable skins and dead flower heads. And the colours are soft and natural.
Yasmin experiments with flower dyes in her own home. Some of these experiments then go on to become dyes for Juniper & Bliss. It is worth saying that it’s important to experiment when it comes to home dyeing. Not every project will come out perfectly, although the techniques are easy and instructions are simple to follow.
Plus sustainable and zero waste
Juniper and Bliss aim to be completely sustainable and ‘zero waste’. ‘We want to leave the lightest environmental footprint,’ says Yasmin.
They also want everything to be produced ethically and to Fair Trade standards. Fabrics are made and dyed by small scale producers and artisanal co-operatives around the world, such as Scottish micro-mills or co-operatives in India. Clothes and bedding are then sewn in atelier protege in Belgium. (This roughly translates as ‘protected workshop’, where around 40% of the workers are differently abled.)
Flowers and vegetable skins for dyes at home
At home in Kent, Yasmin brews up avocado pips and skins from a local cafe and asks beautiful local garden Doddington Place if she can have their daffodil deadheads in late spring. She is even drying bunches of flowers sent to her as a gift.
I wrote about how to create stunning dyes from your garden plants after interviewing a friend in Australia who is ‘mapping her garden with dye plants.’ And in the RHS Chelsea Flower Show a Dyer’s Garden was featured for the first time (reviewed here by the Reckless Gardener.)
And now that cut flowers are joining the grow-your-own movement, along with a desire to minimise waste and chemicals, I think the trend towards using natural dyes in your own home can only grow and grow.
First choose your flower or plant
I joined Yasmin for a dyeing session using avocado skins and stones (or you may call them pips). The principles of natural dyeing are approximately the same for many flowers and plants.
However, natural dyers are always trying things out and tweaking their recipes, so keep a note of how your natural dye turns out. More avocado skins and stones? A longer boiling time? Do you need to add a fixative (known as a mordant)? Each recipe is different, so let’s go from start to finish with Yasmin’s avocados.
If your household eats a lot of avocados, you can save the skins and stones, but Yasmin gets hers from a local cafe. She washes the avocado flesh off the scraps and then allows it to dry. Most flowers and plants can be used as dye either fresh or dried, although the effect will be different. Yasmin’s bowl of avocado skins and stones has been sitting in her kitchen for several weeks, waiting to be used.
I’ve done a video showing the process, which you can see below:
Brew up the flower heads, fruit skins or stones…
Yasmin added several handfuls of avocado skins and stones to a large stainless steel pan. She added water, to a depth of two to three times. Then she brings it to the boil and simmers it for around an hour until she estimates the dye is strong enough.
The wool or cotton needs to be wet if it is to take the dye evenly, so soak it in another bowl while you’re making the dye.
The next stage – add the natural dye to the wool or fabric
Squeeze out the cotton or wool so that it is damp, but not soaking.
Then strain the dye liquid. You may be able to brew up another dye from the same material, and the ‘2nd dye bath’ will come out slightly different (usually paler, not surprisingly).
Allow the dye liquid to cool a little before adding the fabric.
Swirl the wool or fabric around in the pan so that the liquid is evenly distributed. Then return the pan to the heat, bringing it very briefly to the boil.
Turn it down to simmer immediately and simmer for around an hour. Don’t let it boil or it will felt the wool.
Not all natural dyes need to be boiled. Yasmin had a large pot of eucalyptus leaves infusing in her kitchen. This brew won’t be heated up.
When the wool is approximately the shade you want, lift it out of the dyeing water, and hang it up to dry. It will probably be paler when dry, so experiment a bit.
I’d say the process is similar to making marmalade in terms of time and effort. It takes quite a long time, because of all the simmering and steeping, but for most of that time, it’s just brewing away without much interference from you. We were able to enjoy a delightful lunch while the dye was boiling and simmering.
The natural dye is ready…
When you judge that the dye is ready, drain the dye and gently wash the wool in a very mild detergent. Wool doesn’t like going from one extreme of temperature to another. So allow it to cool a little and also wash it in warm water rather than hot or cool. Once any excess dye has been washed out, hang the wool or cotton up to dry.
More colours from natural plant dyes
Plant dyeing is very low tech, and plant dyers experiment with their recipes and take notes. If you want to read more before starting, India Flint is the guru on natural plant dyeing. Start with her book Eco Colour – Botanical Dyes for Beautiful Textiles.
The Modern Natural Dyer, A Comprehensive Guide to Dyeing Silk, Wool, Linen and Cotton at Home by Kristine Vejar is also highly rated. And gardeners who want to think about what to plant in their garden should enjoy Rita Buchanan’s The Weaver’s Garden.
Note: links to Amazon are affiliate links, which means I may receive a small fee if you buy through them, but it won’t affect the price you pay.
There are also workshops where you can learn about dyeing. These include day and weekend workshops from Flora Arbuthnott. Craft Courses is a website that lists dyeing, spinning and other crafting courses around the UK.
And if you don’t knit or dye…
You can buy naturally dyed, sustainable and zero waste bedding and scarves from Juniper & Bliss online.
One of my favourite Juniper & Bliss products is their Fisherman’s Net bags. These net bags scrunch up to fit into a pocket or handbag. Then, when you’ve bought something you can whip them out and use them as carrier bags.
Pin to remember natural dye tips
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I was wondering if your dyes have to have a mordant? Are they fixed or will they fade in the wash?
Both Yasmin and Carolyn (the subject of another post on natural dyes) experiment with mordants of various kinds, as well as using the dyes without mordants, so I think it’s a question of trial and error and working out what works for you. Here is the other post: /how-to-create-stunning-dyes-from-garden-plants/
unless I have missed something major, why no photograph of the results re avacado?
The first photograph, top blanket, is the avocado dye, but it’s probably not clearly enough captioned, so I’ll correct that, thank you for pointing it out.
Alexandra thank you so much for making this blog. We love the way you have told the story of Juniper & Bliss. We are very excited to be sharing this with our friends ! It was a fun day working with you and we love the result.xx
Thank you – and you create such beautiful colours and fabrics. I think they will inspire lots of people to give plant-based dyeing a try.
Fascinating article – thank you.
Thank you – another of the interesting creative people we have in Faversham.