Since I started teaching natural dyes at West Dean College, I have had a problem. How could I save, transport and use litres of expensive dye not fully exhausted on the course? I travel with two large beer-making flagons containing indigo, but transporting additional containers of weld, madder and cochineal isn’t feasible – and I hate waste.
For some years I have been working with my friend and colleague Yuli Sømme, who commissions me to dye different shades of wool felt for her company Bellacouche, in Moretonhampstead (see link below). If I have pieces of mordanted and wetted-out felt ready, I can dunk it into the vats on the final night at the College, and by the next morning much of the used dye is exhausted and the felts dyed. I can rinse out the felts and take them home in empty buckets. The exhausted dye can be discarded.
But if students need the vats on the final day, or I am travelling home the day I finish teaching, I don’t have the option of using Yuli’s felt and the leftover dyes.
The Art and Science of Natural Dyes: by Catharine Ellis and Joy Boutrop
A newly-published book by Catharine Ellis and Joy Boutrop has encouraged me to experiment with making lake pigments from the leftover dyes at West Dean. Their suggested process greatly reduces the volume to be transported and involves binding the leftover dye to the alum mordant, thus turning it into a concentrated lake pigment. The pigment is precipitated using alum and soda ash and sinks to the bottom of the vessel, leaving the water on the surface, which can be poured off.

Making a madder lake. You can see the dye beginning to precipitate and separate from the water
The resulting substance is strained through cloth and when this process is complete, a gooey, paste-y mixture like thick custard remains.

Straining the madder pigment through a cloth
By reversing the chemical process at home, again using the instructions in the book, I can dye pieces of wetted-out felted wool – which do not require a mordant.
It is typical of this book, which in its entirety covers a very wide range of natural dye processes, that methods are well-explained, options or alternatives outlined, and reasons given for certain instructions. Recipes are clear and easy to follow and I would have greatly valued the book in my library when I started natural dyeing because of its comprehensive treatment of the subject and a thoroughly researched, straightforward approach. I will write more in future posts because I am still learning so much from the work of these two authors.
Since my West Dean course last month I have made pigments from madder and weld lakes, and tried mixing them with indigo and earth pigments.

Madder and weld pigments (pink and yellow) and overpaints of earth pigments sienna and ochre (rusts and red-brown) from Roussillon in France. Painted on soya-sized cotton
Links
The Art and Science of Natural Dyes: Principles, Experiments and Results
At time of writing, this book isn’t readily available in the UK. Check this link on the Blackwell’s site to see if it is in stock.
Yuli Sømme’s company in Moretonhampstead, Devon
West Dean College Short Courses
My next natural dye course at West Dean is March 27 – 29th 2020.
May 13, 2019 at 6:16 am
Very Well Explained. It really helps me a lot & Congrats on your new book.
September 30, 2020 at 7:12 pm
Hi 🙂 I am new in the world of lake pigments, how do you reverse the process? I thought that by obtaining the pigment, it would not be useful for dyeing anymore because it would become not water soluble.
Thank you, and sorry if it is a stupid question.
October 4, 2020 at 7:32 pm
Hi Tania, Apologies for not responding to this for so long and it’s not at all a stupid question. I needed to look up a couple of things. I learned this technique from the book ‘The Art and Science of Natural Dyes’ by Joy Boutrup and Catharine Ellis. They have a recipe (their number 18) for using split dye lakes and they only recommend it for wool. It uses citric acid `and no mordant is required. Do you have the book? It is one I definitely recommend. Best wishes
November 4, 2020 at 8:05 pm
Hi 🙂 sorry I didn’t see your reply ( google sent it to spam :c) thank you so much for the book recommendation, i will search for it 🙂
November 4, 2020 at 10:36 pm
Hallo Tania, I hope you find the book either by buying, borrowing from a friend or from a library. Best wishes