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How to Make Organic Natural Red Dye

illustration of plants used for making natural red dyes

Illustration: The Spruce / Ashley Nicole DeLeon

One of the most treasured colors in the plant world is red and nature also gives us an abundance of plants that produce red dyes.  

Learn how to create natural red dye from plants for home, clothing, and craft projects. Other plants and natural materials will create a rainbow of dyes including blackbluegreenpurple, peach or salmon, pinkbrown, orange, and yellow.

Once you have extracted the color from the natural tannins in the plant material, you can use it to dye yarns and fabrics. To create the deepest and longest-lasting colors, use plenty of the plant material, allow the dye bath to steep for several hours, and use appropriate mordants to set the colors in the fabric.

Autumn Red Leaves

Gather red autumn leaves at their peak to create a dye bath that will produce a reddish-brown color. Simply place the leaves in a large pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil and allow them to steep for several hours. Strain out solids. The dye will set well to the fabric by adding salt to the rinse water.

red leaves
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Bamboo

Bamboo is a member of the true grass family. Native to Asia, bamboos are some of the fastest-growing plants in the world. Today bamboo is farmed for building materials, fabric manufacturing, food products, and many other uses. Many cultivated varieties are grown in gardens around the world.

When boiled with water, bamboo shoots produce a turkey red dye.

bamboo
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Bedstraw Root

Bedstraw, also known as Gallium Rubiaceae, is a perennial found in temperate zones throughout North and South America. Records of bedstraw dye are found from Anglo-Saxon times in England.

To achieve a red dye, the roots must be boiled with water.

Sweetscented bedstraw
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Beet Roots

The beet, Beta vulgaris, is a plant best known in its numerous cultivated varieties including the common garden beet.

The color of garden beetroot is due to a variety of betalain pigments. The composition of different betalain pigments can vary, producing beetroots which are yellow or other colors in addition to the familiar deep red. Beetroot cells are quite unstable and will 'leak' when cut or heated. Removing the skin when boiling will help release more of the dye.

To achieve a red-purple dye, select rich red beets and boil with water.

Beets
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Brazilwood

Brazilwood, Caesalpinia echinata, is a timber tree native to Brazil and South America. The wood of this tree has a deep red hue that can be used to create a dye bath when boiled in water.

The trees are now endangered and the trade of brazilwood is likely to be banned in the immediate future. Groups are working to replant the trees due to their highly prized wood for violin bows.

brazilwood
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Canadian Hemlock

Canadian hemlock, Tsuga canadensis, also known as eastern hemlock with a range from northeastern Minnesota eastward through southern Quebec to Nova Scotia, and south into the Appalachian Mountains of northern Georgia and Alabama.

The bark of the Canadian hemlock is scaly and deeply fissured and produces a lovely reddish-brown dye bath when boiled with water.

Canadian Hemlock
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Chokecherries

Chokecherry trees, Prunus virginiana, are native to North America and are found everywhere except the deep South. It is a small tree and produces fruit that ranges in color from bright red to dark purple.

To create a brilliant red dye, pick the red berries to boil with water.

chokecherry
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Crabapple Bark

Crabapple trees, Malus, can be found in most temperate areas around the world. There are wild species and many, many cultivated varieties. The fruit can range from green to yellow to dark red. It is the bark, however, that can produce a red-orange dye bath when boiled with water.

crabapple bark
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Elderberry

Elderberry, Sambucus, is a small tree or shrub found in temperate and subtropical areas around the world. The ripe elderberries can be used to make wine, cordials, and to dye fabric. While the berries are quite dark, you will find that ripe elderberries produce a lovely lavender dye when the juice is extracted.

Select the unripened berries, still red with the skins, to boil with water to create a red dye bath.

Elderberry
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Hibiscus Flowers

Hibiscus is a flowering plant that is part of the mallow family. It is found in tropical areas and can be grown as a potted plant on patios during warm weather.

Hibiscus flowers are used to make teas, season foods, and create food coloring. You can make a nice reddish-purple dye by boiling the dark red and purple fresh or dried flowers with water.

Hibiscus
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Madder Root

Madder, Rubia, is a perennial scrambling or climbing herb found in temperate areas around the world. It is a cousin to bedstraw and the plants are often confused. Madder roots have been used for centuries to create a red dye known as rose madder or Turkey red.

Boil the roots with water to create the dye bath.

Madder
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Portulaca

Portulaca, Portulacaceae, is a flowering plant of about 40-100 species found in the tropics and warm temperate regions. The plants are also called Moss Roses with colors ranging from magenta, red, scarlet, orange to yellow.

Use the flowers, dried and crushed with a vinegar or salt mordant, to create a dye bath with boiling water. Use the brightest red flowers you can find to give the best red dye or mix flower colors to achieve different shades of red.

portulaca
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Rose Hips

The rose hip is the fruit of the rose plant. They are usually red-to-orange, but range from dark purple to black and ripen in late summer. Rose hips can be used to produce tea, jellies or alcoholic beverages.

To create a red dye bath, gather the reddest hips and boil with water. If you have no roses, dried rose hips are available for purchase.

Rose hips
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St. John's Wort

St. John's Wort, Hypericum perforatum, is now known as an over-the-counter treatment for mild depression. But for many years the plant that can be found in almost every country was gathered to create red dye.

It is a perennial plant with extensive, creeping rhizomes. Its stems are erect and the leaves are yellow-green. The flowers have five petals and are bright yellow with conspicuous black dots. The flowers appear between late spring and early to mid-summer.

The whole plant must be soaked in isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol) to create a red dye bath.

st. johns wort
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Sumac Fruit

Sumac, Rhus, grows in subtropical and temperate regions throughout the world, especially in Africa and North America. They propagate easily and can become a nuisance shrub or small tree.

Almost every part of the common sumac plant can be used to create a dye. The leaves will produce a tan or very light brown dye when boiled with water. Leather tanned with sumac is flexible, light in weight, and light in color. One type of leather made with sumac tannins is Morocco leather.

It is the ripened fruit that will produce a light red dye bath when boiled with water.

Sumac
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Sycamore Bark

The sycamore tree, Platanus occidentalis, is native to North America. It is easily recognizable from other trees by its mottled exfoliating bark, which flakes off in great irregular masses, leaving the surface greenish-white, gray, and brown.

The reddish-brown bark will create a red dye bath when boiled with water.

sycamore tree
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