Dye Plants for Eco Printing and Eco Dyeing


Introductory notes
:
The search for hidden colours, forms and textures is for me the lure of eco dyeing and eco printing, and a form of art. Eco dyeing and eco printing are essentially direct contact printing methods, drawing out pigments from plants to make interesting and often surprising marks on cellulose (cotton, linen) and protein (silk, wool) fibres, and not necessarily to dye yardage or yarns evenly. While traditional dye practices provide indispensable information and guidance for eco printing, not every colour available in a plant reveals itself in a traditional immersion dye pot.  Eco printing processes aim to use traditional dye plants in both old and new ways and to try plants not well known as dye sources.  Art, like science, reveals the invisible!
This page provides an “in-progress” alphabetical list of plants that I use successfully to eco print textiles and paper as described in my blog posts. The plants are garden-grown or foraged locally (in the Ottawa, Ontario area), with an emphasis on native plants for all North America, especially the north-east and that can also be grown in other parts of the world. I have given the common names in English and French, plus the scientific (Latin) names, noting briefly colours most often obtained in eco prints with alum mordant.
The page is organized by common plant name in English and features my photos of the plants. Currently, the list starts with ‘Alder’ and ends with ‘Walnut’, so it is a long scroll for you, dear Reader…
The textiles and papers pictured here were mostly pre-mordanted with alum acetate or potassium aluminum suphate, and sometimes co-mordanted or post-mordanted with iron (liquor or bits). The fibres printed were silk, wool, cotton and linen, and cotton rag watercolour paper, as noted.
Eco printing results vary according to many conditions – plant season, plant part used, processing time, water quality, pH level, mordant, processing method, fibre type (protein, cellulose or synthetic), etc.
Future pages (of which this one is parent) will be devoted in-depth to related topics: eco print processes, eco dye colours, mordants and gardens for eco dyes. In my definition (so far!) ‘eco dyes’ refer to the colours the plant can be induced to surrender, and ‘eco prints’ to the forms these dyes take on the substrate. 

A FEW DYE GARDEN VIEWS
My new and much smaller garden, my “kale yard”, started in the summer of 2014 after our downsizing-move in 2013. I am developing a garden of native plants with some favourite non-native plant introductions thrown in.
wpid-Photo-20150216013416927.jpg
Above is one view of the front garden, with ‘Lacinato‘ kale (‘Dinosaur‘ kale, black kale), fronted by native and pollinator plants: great blue lobelia (Lobelia syphilitica), beside Sedum spectabilis ‘Autumn Joy’ and assorted hostas, with native species Monarda didyma and a yellow goldenrod in the background. In the back yard, shown in part below, I am developing a woodland feel with principally native shrubs and perennials: e.g.: big bluestem grass, bloodroot, cedar, clematis, goat’s beard, iris, rhubarb, serviceberry, Solomon’s seal, spiderwort, smokebush and sumac. With iron bedstead and no grass.
wpid-Photo-Jun-17-2014-620-PM.jpg

PLANTS FOR ECO PRINTS AND ECO DYES
A photo of the plant and of sample eco prints accompany each entry on the list.

ALDER (Alnus incana)
Native
French: Aulne; bois a rames.
DYE COLOURS: Orange-brown prints from the leaves.
PLANT:
RedAlder_leaves
ECO PRINT: Alder leaf on watercolour paper:
Ep_alder1_Dec2011_3

APPLE (Malus domestica)
Native species.
French: Pommier
DYE COLOURS: Teal blue-green from pink blossoms; yellow-green from leaves.
PLANT:
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-519-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: ‘Royalty’ crabapple leaves and blossoms on paper.
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-507-PM.jpg

Aronia/CHOKEBERRY  (Aronia melanocarpa)
Native.
French: Aronie noire, gueules noires.
DYE COLOURS: Blue-purple  from berries. Plant image coming when the snow disappears!
PLANT: 
ECO PRINT: Aronia berries (blue) on silk with Acer palmatum and Prunus cistena leaves. A rusty saw-tooth blade gave the iron print:
IMG_1995

FALSE (WILD) INDIGO, RATTLEBUSH (Baptisia australis)
Native.
French:
Colours: DYE COLOURS: Fluorescent yellow eco print from leaves on silk.
PLANT:
wpid-Photo-Jun-17-2014-605-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Baptisia australis leaves hold a fluorescent yellow pigment. With the baptisia (below) is red from Coreopsis verticillata and blue from aronia berries (see above).
IMG_2016

BASIL/Purple basil. (Ocimum basilicum var. purpurescens)
French: Basilique
DYE COLOURS: Purple-blue prints on cellulose and protein fibres
PLANT:
PurpleBasil_1
ECO PRINT: Purple basil with tagetes marigold (yellow) and eucalyptus (peachy-orange) on silk. Holes and burns come from microwaving bay leaves too long…
Dyeing_Sep2011018

BIRCH(Betula papyrifera.)
Native. Paper birch, white birch
French: Bouleau blanc
DYE COLOURS: Leaves, inner and outer bark, catkins traditionally yield dye-pot colour; TBD
PLANT:
ECO PRINT:


BLACKBERRY. (Rubus fruticosus).
Native species.
French: Ronce (Image, Wikipedia)
DYE COLOURS:Berries give blue-purple shades, known to be fugitive; leaves and stems give dark greens for eco prints; dark greys are reported for a traditional immersion dye pot.
PLANT: 
File:Bee pollinating Blackberry.jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ECO PRINT: Fall blackberry leaf on paper (lower left: under leaf; lower right, top side) Ep_BB_JM_Nov2011

BLACK-EYED SUSAN, BROWN-EYED SUSAN. (Rudbeckia hirta)
Native.
French: Marguerite jaune; obéliscaire
DYE COLOURS:Yellows from flowers, greens from leaves and stalks

PLANT: 

wpid-Photo-Sep-6-2013-1112-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Black-eyed susan:


BLOODROOT (Sanguinaria canadensis)
Native
French: Sang dragon; sanguinaire du Canada
Dye plant used by First Nations
DYE COLOURS: Intense orange-red from the juicy roots on protein or cellulose fibres.

PLANT:

Sanguinaria canadensis_closeup2
PLANT: Red roots
ECO PRINT: Bloodroot on silk jersey; grated red root with yellow-green dogwood (Cornus sericea), baptisia, geranium and cotinus leaves. Iron darks.
4BloodrootBaptisiaCotinusDogwood2

BORAGE  (Borago officinalis)
French: Bourrache officinale
DYE COLOURS: Flowers give blue dyes, especially when frozen.
PLANT: 
Borage
ECO PRINT: Borage:

POT MARIGOLD , MARY BUDS, MARY’S GOLD (Calendula officinalis).
French:
DYE COLOURS: Yellow-orange dyes from flowers.
PLANT: A new variety here, not the old fashioned calendula above.
wpid-Photo-20141028225744.jpg
ECO PRINT: Pot marigold

CARROT (Daucus carota)
French: Carotte
DYE COLOURS: Eco prints greeny yellow.
PLANT:
ECO PRINT: Carrot (with red cabbage) Yellow green from tops on paper, left. With red cabbage (blues and purples), right. Reported to be fugitive colours. Overlay the two for green.
Carrot(L)andPurpCabbage(R)_onpaper

CATALPA(Catalpa speciosa)
Native. French:
DYE COLOURS: Catalpa pods are tannin-rich and give substantive browns
PLANT:

ECO PRINT: Pods (tannin-rich) give deep brown lasting shades on wool. Catalpa pods print dark brown on wool (here with orange prints of Eucalyptus globulus)
CatalpaEucalyptus_EcoprintedSilkWool_Nov2011

CATMINT (Nepeta cataria)
French: Herbe à chats
DYE COLOURS: Blue flowers give teal blue-green.
PLANT: 
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-357-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Whole catmint plant, print on paper: like many blue blossoms, it will give a teal colour with alum:
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-509-PM.jpg

CHOKECHERRY (Prunus virginiana).
‘Shubert’ and ‘Canada Red’ are varieties with red leaves.
Native.
French: Cerisier a grappes.
DYE COLOURS: Deep greens and near-blacks; also yellowish-brown from leaves; purple-blue from the black berries
PLANT (Red leaves, black berries):
ECO PRINT: Leaves print deep greens, greys and near-blacks, depending on season and substrate; yellows, too.
Fall leaves, green-black and yellow prints on paper, lasting shades.
wpid-Photo-Nov-6-2009-724-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Late summer leaves, green print on paper with other leaves:
wpid-Photo-Nov-1-2012-331-PM.jpg

COREOPSIS ( C. lanceolata, C. tinctoria, C.verticillata)
Native.
French:
DYE COLOURS: Reds, oranges and deep yellow prints from blooms; C. verticillata: whole plant gives vivid scarlet red

PLANT:
C. lanceolata:

wpid-Photo-Jun-23-2012-455-AM.jpg
C. verticillata ‘Zagreb’ – threadleaf coreopsis: you can see why!
CoreopsisVerticillata_july20113
ECO PRINT: C. verticillata, print on linen with blue-green sumac: A mighty red!
IMG_6197
ECO PRINT: C. verticillata with sumac, red apple slices and purple sandcherry twigs and leaves on silk:
CoreoPrCSumacOnSilk

CREEPING BELLFLOWER (Campanula rapunculoides)
French: Campanule raiponcette

DYE COLOURS: A lovely lavender blue print.
PLANT: Not a native, and an invasive weed for some gardeners, but a keeper in my garden.
CampanulaRanunculoidies_Plant
ECO PRINT: Creeping bellflower:

DOGWOOD spp(Cornus alternifolia, C. canadensis, C. sericea, C. stolonofera and others)
Native. French: Cornouiller spp.
DYE COLOURS: Yellows and greens from leaves; reds and browns from twig bark.
PLANT: Oval, pointed and ribbed leaves on Cornus alternifolia (Pagoda dogwood). Red twigs on Cornus sericea.
PagodaDogwood
ECO PRINT: Yellows
(Reds here are from grated bloodroot)
wpid-Photo-20141028225747.jpg


DAHLIA.
Native.
French: 
DYE COLOURS:
PLANT:
ECO PRINT:


DANDELION (Taraxacum officinale)
French: Dent-de-lion (“Lion’s Tooth”), Pis en lit (“Wet The Bed”)
I love this “green immigrant” – and eco dye garden beneficial
PLANT:
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-353-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Dandelion on paper, below. With iron, you get a lovely olive green.
P1090575

DYER’S BROOM (Genista tinctoria).
Green immigrant. It is a traditional dye plant for yellow, a Euro intro.
Mine died last year…RIP.
Try again this year!
PLANT:
ECO PRINT
:

ELDER (Sambucus nigra, S. canadensis)
Native
French: Sureau blanc; sureau du Canada
Black berries give purple-blues reported as ‘fugitive’; leaves give yellow-green prints.
wpid-Photo-20141028225745.jpg
ECO PRINT: Elder leaves on silk with coreopsis verticillata; dark marks from iron print.
Iron extends the print life.
wpid-Photo-Sep-19-2013-224-PM.jpg

EUCALYPTUS spp.
Exotic Florist Pet
I save branches that come in bouquets that Shlomo brings for Shabbat dinner.
Image shows round-leaved E. globulus “Baby Blue” and a seeded eucalyptus, name unknown to me.
DYE COLOURS:  Red to orange to yellow and brown with chartreuse thrown in
PLANT: 
Eucalyptus_BabyBlueandSeededVarieties
ECO PRINT: E.globulus on old wool ski socks: reds and green-yellows from the same plant!
Sweat as mordant gave the reds, maybe…same alum, same leaves, same wool!
wpid-Photo-Mar-11-2011-700-AM.jpg

FERN, OSTRICH (Mateuccia struthiopteris)
Native
French: Fougère; ptérétide noduleuse.
DYE COLOURS: Greens, green-yellows

I am guessing this is ostrich fern. It came with the new garden!

PLANT:

wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-422-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Fern prints on paper: 2% iron water to shift the yellow greens to olive greens plus act as a mordant.
Fern_iron

FIG (Ficus carica)
Exotic Potted Pet (Green Immigrant)
DYE COLOURS: Yellow-green eco prints sometimes reported as fugitive
(Aside: Interesting that the first (human) creative handwork reported in the Bible, post-Paradise, was a textile art:  Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves to make clothing. The colours probably stained skin, too…)
PLANT:
ECO PRINT:
I do not have a plant photo handy yet, or an eco print, so here meantime is a fig leaf I printed with acrylics:
wpid-Photo-Apr-24-2014-1025-PM.jpg


GERANIUM/Cranesbill (Geranium maculatum)
Nativc
G. macrorrhizum, G. pratense, etc are perennial geranium hybrids and cultivars.  (The red ones in pots are pelargoniums.)
DYE COLOURS: Green and yellow-green eco prints from leaves and pinks and purples from pink blooms.

PLANT:

PGeranium_June2011
ECO PRINT: Geranium winter leaf print on paper: the yellow-green print (upper left) shifted to dark greys with an iron dip, post printing . (I dug the near-evergreen leaves from under the January snow).
GerPer_Iron1

GOLDEN MARGUERITE; Dyer’s Marguerite (Anthemis tinctoria)
Introduced.
French:
DYE COLOURS: Golden yellow from flowers; chartreuse greens from leaves etc
PLANT
GoldenMarguerite__________________________________________________________________________________GOLDENROD (Solidago spp.)
Native. (There are many, kinds of goldenrod, and I am collecting especially those that attract pollinators)
French: Verge d’or.  
DYE COLOURS: Flowers give yellow dyes and eco prints; leaves give green prints.

PLANT
S.nutallii
:
Solidagonutallii_5
ECO PRINT: S. canadensis on paper:

Ep_Varia_Solidago1JPG


GRAPE (Vitis riparia)
Native. Riverbank grape.
French: Raisin sauvage.
DYE COLOURS: Green-yellow from leaves; purple-blue from fruits.
PLANT:
ECO PRINT:


HYPERICUM spp.
Introduced.
French:
DYE COLOURS
Polychromatic dye (i.e., more than one colour, depending on the extraction process)
PLANT
Blossoms_hypericum


Hapzome_hypericumSmooshed hypericum petals:












Hypericum plant in alcohol to give red:
SolarDye2_hypericum

__________________________________________________________________________________HYDRANGEA
Native species: Oakleaf hydrangea
French:
DYE COLOURS: Yellows from leaves; blooms, yellow from white “Annabelle”
PLANT:
ECO PRINT: Hydrangea leaves on paper: yellow-greens in spring with red cabbage (blues, purples)
HydrangeaWithRedCab_onpaper

IRIS  sp.
Native (?)
I. florentina; I. germanica; I. hybrida; I. siberica; I. versicolor.
Well adapted pioneer plants, with some irises thought to be native. (The Esteemed Lorraine Johnson says I. tenax is native) Quebec’s provincial emblem, the Fleur de Lis, is the Iris versicolor, native or not. Voilà, mes amis!wpid-Photo-2011-07-07-1105-AM.jpg
DYE COLOURS: A range of yellows, blues and greens; blue iris petal juice was traditionally used in the Renaissance painter’s palette for greens (See my main blog post for details): tall bearded iris ( a heritage variety):
PLANT: Iris hybrida, tall bearded iris ( a heritage variety):
P1100034
Siberian iris:
SiberianIris
ECO PRINT: Iris petals on paper; green cotton thread dyed with iris petal juice
wpid-Photo-2011-07-05-416-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Iris blooms on silk (later embroidered with green thread dyed with iris):
wpid-Photo-2011-06-05-1229-PM.jpg
JAPANESE INDIGO (Persicaria tinctoria). (PS The BAD GUY is Japanese knotweed- Fallopia japonica – and an invasive species here in Canada)
DYE COLOURS: A blue-green vat dye; not your Usual Eco Dye Suspect.
(See my main blog posts for How To info on dyeing with Japanse indigo.)
PLANT: Home grown plants from collected seeds.
wpid-Photo-Aug-6-2014-1059-AM.jpg
VAT DYE: Japanese indigo dye on silk velvet: with Japanese maple, cotinus leaves, aronia berries and tansy buttons; the lucious turquoise is the dye colour.
wpid-Photo-Aug-13-2014-807-PM.jpg

JAPANESE MAPLE (Acer palmatum).
French:
DYE COLOURS: Many colours of print are possible from this plant, depending on the season, the substrate, the mordant, co-prints and the colour of the leaves: e.g.: blues, greens, yellows, purples and even pinks. This Japanese maple in The Kaleyard (my front garden) is ‘Bloodgood’
PLANT: 
wpid-Photo-Jun-17-2014-631-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Fall Japanese maple leaves: blues, purples and greens on paper with sweet gum and smokebush:
wpid-Photo-Nov-1-2012-330-PM.jpg

LILAC (Syringa spp.)
Not native but a beloved and well adapated Euro pioneer introduction.
French: Lilas
DYE COLOURS: Pink and blue lilac flowers often print teal blue-greens; lilac leaves print yellows and greens.
(Aside: ‘Prestonia’ lilacs now abound in Ottawa gardens; they are a hardy strain developed  by Isabella Preston at the Central Experimental Farm research station in Ottawa. Isabella did not get the credit from her male colleagues  for a long while…)
PLANT:  You can almost smell these lovelies :)
wpid-Photo-May-12-2013-1055-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Lilac leaves and blossoms on paper:
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-514-PM.jpg

MAPLE (Acer saccharum- sugar maple; A. saccharinum- silver maple)
Native.
DYE COLOURS:
Prints yellowish-green alone but deep charcoal with iron on paper, cotton and silk.
Aside: The Canadian sugar maple is on our flag.
PLANT:

ECO PRINT: a silver maple leaf on a cotton tee-shirt, with rose leaves, iron-dipped:
IMG_0923
ECO PRINT: Acer saccharinum (silver maple) with rusted iron on paper, linen and cotton:
wpid-Photo-2011-07-30-1015-AM.jpg

OAK  (Quercus spp. )
Native.
French: Chêne.
DYE COLOURS: Rich yellow-tan brown
PLANT: 
ECO PRINT: Oak leaf on paper with chokecherry
wpid-Photo-Jun-7-2012-1211-PM.jpg

PANSY (Viola spp.)
French: Pensée.
Johnny Jump Up (pictured) is violette pensée in French
DYE COLOURS: Blue eco prints, especially from frozen petals
PLANT
wpid-Photo-Jun-17-2014-607-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Pansy. Pink and purple (with yellow from tagetes) on vintage linen; prints darker and exudes more juice after freezing the petals; ditto for most fleshy blue petals.

PURPLE (RED) CABBAGE including KALE (Brassica spp.)
French: Choux
DYE COLOURS: Colours pH dependent; widely reported as fugitive. Towards magentas and purples in a more acid environment: lower than pH 7; towards blues and greens in a more alkaline environment: higher than pH7. Measured by pH strips or pH meter.
PLANT (in an immersion dye pot with an eco-bundle splashed with vinegar)
Leaves_RedCab
ECO PRINT: Purple cabbage (blues) with C. verticillata (reds, oranges) on paper:
IMG_0786

PURPLE SANDCHERRY (Prunus cistena)
Native spp.  Also P. nigra, P. pumila, P. serotina, P.virginiana.
French: Prunier, sauvage
DYE COLOURS: Ecoprints good dark greens and green-blues, especially on protein fibres.
PLANT
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-353-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Purple sandcherry leaves (L) with red coreopsis (R) on wool felt:
wpid-Photo-Jul-22-2013-122-PM.jpg

RED AMARANTH (Amaranthus spp.).
Native. (The famous Hopi red dye comes from one variety)
French:
DYE COLOURS: Stains more that it dyes or prints on vintage linen. Under investigation by your author.

PLANT

AugDyes_29
ECO PRINT: Red amaranth on vintage linen:
RedAmaraSumac_EcoprintedLinen

SMOKEBUSH (Cotinus obovatus)
Native.
Cotinus coggygria (purple smokebush) is the Euro cotinus with deep red leaves.
French:
DYE COLOURS: Amazing colours from cotinus: orange, blue, green, yellow, brown, purple…depending.
PLANT:
ECO PRINT: Purple smokebush.  Fall leaves on paper
wpid-Photo-Dec-19-2012-934-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Purple smokebush autumn-coloured leaves on gold-foiled silk:
wpid-Photo-2012-07-13-456-AM.jpg 

ROSE (Rosa spp. )
Native species: R. blanda, R. carolina, R. rugosa, R. virginiana, etc
French: Rose 
DYE COLOURS: Leaves print green; olive or blue-black with iron .  
PLANT: ‘Bonica‘, a Z4 hardy hybrid.
RoseBonica_June2011
ECO PRINT: Rosa rugosa on cotton:
wpid-Photo-2012-08-03-607-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Green Rosa rugosa leaves on paper with blue from chokeceherry fruit:
wpid-Photo-2012-09-12-947-AM.jpg

SAFFLOWER. (Carthamus tinctorius)
French: Carthame.
DYE COLOURS: Dried petals ecoprint yellow  on silk; other dye colours obtained using a different immersion and pH manipulation processes. See below.
Dried petals are a saffron substitute (“American saffron”) obtained in the spice section of a Mid East grocery store.) Seeds are widely used for bird seed and are said to deter squirrels.
PLANT
SafflowerDried
IMMERSION DYE: Coral pinks on cotton and silk in the dye pot:
Safflowerpinkcotton_5
Safflower is a special case. The pink, yellow and orange dyes come from the same petals as a result of an interesting and challenging process (See my main blog for more info on the process)

SASKATOONBERRY (Amelanchier alnifolia)
Native
French: Bois de flèche; Saskatons, poire
DYE COLOURS: Berries print blue. Used by some First Nations to dye baskets and arrows.
PLANT:
saskberryfall
ECO PRINT: Saskatoonberries in the freezer for stronger purple-blue prints

SERVICEBERRY(Amelanchier arborea; A. laevis; A. canadensis )
Native.
French: Amelanchier du Canada
DYE COLOURS: Fall leaves (multicoloured) print shades of brown, tan and reddish brown with yellow on paper. I could not bear to eco print the tasty berries…just shared them with the birds right off the bush.
PLANT: 
P1100286
PLANT: Serviceberry flowers
wpid-Photo-2011-05-06-855-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Red and brown serviceberry leaves (winter, frozen) eco print on paper:
wpid-Photo-2013-01-22-542-PM.jpg

STRAWBERRY (Fragaria virginiana)
Native species. Wild strawberry.
French: Fraisier des champs. Bear food!
DYE COLOURS: Pink prints, fugitive; leaves, a good yellow-green print on paper
PLANT:
ECO PRINT: Strawberry

STAGHORN SUMAC (Rhus typhina) 
Native.
French: Vinaigrier; sumac vinaigrier.
DYE COLOURS: Green and yellow green eco prints from leaves; teal-blue with iron. Pinks and light reds from the berries
Sumac is a traditional dye plant, providing light yellow in the dye pot; also a source of tannin for mordanting cellulose fibres. 

PLANT:
R. typhina

wpid-Photo-Jun-17-2014-610-PM.jpg
PLANT: Sumac berries
wpid-Photo-Feb-7-2011-633-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Sumac on paper:
wpid-Photo-Nov-1-2012-326-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Dried sumac berries on paper:
wpid-Photo-Jan-30-2013-1007-PM.jpg



SWEET GUM
 (Liquidambar styraciflua)
Native.
French:
DYE COLOURS:  Ecoprinted fall sweet gum leaves: greens, yellows, purples, browns, even pinks
PLANT (shown with eucalyptus):
SweetGumWithEuc_Oct2011

ECO PRINT
: Sweet gum leaves on paper with Japanese maple:
IMG_0528

TAGETES MARIGOLD (Tagetes spp.)
French: Oeillet d’Inde
Orange-yellow prints from petals; green from calices.
Traditional dye-pot plant
IMG_1770
ECO PRINT: Tagetes on silk habotai with red cabbage (blues):
IMG_1883

TANSY  (Tanacetum vulgare)
French: Tanaisie, tanzé
(T.vulgare is the Euro intro; the native is Tanacetum huronense,  but rare.)
DYE COLOURS:  Yellow from tansy ‘buttons’; green from leaves
Tansy is a traditional dye-pot plant
PLANT: Tansy leaves (ferny ones, on the right)with elder (left) and black eyed susans (yellow):
wpid-Photo-Jul-23-2011-858-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Tansy (See also tansy buttons with the Japanese indigo, previous)

TULIP (Tulipa spp.)
French: Tulipe
Aside: Thank you, Holland: Ottawans love their tulips! The Queen of the Netherlands took refuge in Ottawa during 1939 -1945 war and her daughter was born here. Afterwards, Holland sent millions of tulips every year to Canada as a thank-you. Ottawa has an annual Tulip Festival every May in celebration
DYE COLOURS: From various petal colours on paper: eco printed greens, teals, yellows, pinks, purples:
PLANT: 
wpid-Photo-2011-05-17-255-PM.jpg

ECO PRINT: Tulips on paper,  crazy colours from spent petals and black stamens:wpid-Photo-2011-05-16-508-PM.jpg

VIOLETS (Viola sp. )
Native: Viola canadensis (white), v. labradorica (purple-green leaves, blue flowers); V. pubescens (yellow), V. sororia (blue)
French:Violettes.
DYE COLOURS: Blue petals print teal green-blue on paper; heart-shaped leaves print green. The white ‘Canada violet’ prints yellow or yellow-green. To be honest, I am not quite sure what the name if this blue violet is – maybe V. sororia?
PLANT
wpid-Photo-2011-05-17-1120-AM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Violet leaves and blooms on paper: teal colours from blue petals:
wpid-Photo-May-16-2011-513-PM.jpg

VIRGINIA CREEPER (Parthenocissus quinquefolia)
Native.
French: Vigne vièrge.
DYE COLOURS:: Berries give a fugitive blue-purple in an eco print; leaves, a wimpy yellow-green. Reported as fugitive in the traditional dye pot and even a no-show. Under investigation by your author.
PLANT
IMG_1659
ECO PRINT: Virginia creeper:

BLACK WALNUT (Juglans nigra)
Native.
French: Noyer noir.
Black walnut is a traditional dye-pot plant, no mordant needed (it is a substative dye)
DYE COLOURS: Fruit gives lasting browns from the green husks in fall; leaves, rich yellows in late summer, early fall
PLANT (leaves and nuts)
BlackWalnutFruit
ECO PRINT: Walnut leaf on vintage linen:
wpid-Photo-2013-10-08-1256-PM.jpg
ECO PRINT: Black walnut (Juglans nigra) green husk: centre panel, on felted wool.
Blues and greens from Prunus virginiana, reds and oranges from coreopsis.
IMG_1976

WILLOW (Salix spp.)
Native. S. alba, s. nigra, etc
French: Saule spp.
DYE COLOURS: Yellowish-tan eco print without iron.
PLANT: 
ECO PRINT: Willow leaves on paper; dipped in iron water to darken the print.
wpid-Photo-Jan-30-2013-1010-PM.jpg

Epilogue:
Spring plants ready for eco printing on sumac-dyed (yellow) linen:
wpid-Photo-2011-05-19-1218-PM.jpg

28 Responses to Dye Plants for Eco Printing and Eco Dyeing

  1. Nina Fenner says:
    Wow this is a wonderful reference, thank you for all your hard work documenting this. I’m looking forward to doing some dying when we settle in our new house and this will be really useful.
  2. Iwona says:
    Thank You for Your work…:) Now I feel like I`m ready for the season….Iwona
  3. Prue Quarmby says:
    Thank you so much for all of this information. Some won’t be applicable here in Tasmania (Australia) but wow, such a help to begin!
  4. Thank you, Wendyfe! It’s always nice to learn more! ;-)
  5. Thank you so much for sharing! Really inspriring!
  6. Wonderful! Thanks Wendy for all information! You mentioned many trees with their
    French names! I loved it. Living in Massachusetts but native of France.
  7. Margie says:
    This would be a lovely topic for a study group! Thanks for all the info
    • wendyfe says:
      Thank you, Mary! In return, I looked at your doings in eco printing – wonderful, too! O, that delectable Southern Cross euca red! The northern hemisphere up my way has coreopsis and bloodroot but in nowwhere near as plentiful and year-round supply as the eucalyptus.
      • mazzaus says:
        We are so lucky! But your sumac, service berry and smoke bush… Are all lovely too. I love the way this technique allows detailed investigation of what is local.
  8. Jane Spencer says:
    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge! I have just started to experiment with eco-dying & will be referring to your info a lot this summer.
  9. Darlene says:
    What an amazing resource. Thanks for sharing. A huge amount of helpful information here.
    • wendyfe says:
      Thanks for visiting, Darlene. I have put up a new page – ongoing – with info in order of dye colour, more or less the same plants as in the page you visited. Hope you get some good prints!
      Wendy
  10. Patricia says:
    so appreciate this compilation!
  11. mltai says:
    wonderful resource and great notes…..Awesome
    • wendyfe says:
      I know you will get some great results from your experiments, Melinda! Let us know of any plants you think could work for your climate and mine
      Wendy

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