Needlecrafts Sewing Sewing Basics

How to Make Organic Natural Yellow Dye

raw material for yewllow color natural dye
hepjam / Getty Images

Natural, organic yellow dyes for fabric and fibers can be created from blossoms, leaves, roots, and bark of many different plants. The key is to gather these plants during the proper season and then create the dyes. You can use these dyes to create thousands of tie-dye projects and more. 

Learn how to create natural yellow dyes from 35 plants that can be used for home, clothing, and craft projects. Other plants and natural materials will create a rainbow of dyes including black to green and purple to peach.

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. It's also important to check for dye bleeding after you've dyed fabrics. 

Alfalfa Seeds

Alfalfa, Medicago sativa, is an important forage crop in the United States and many other countries. It resembles clover but it's a legume with a deep root system.

The seeds of alfalfa can be gathered or purchased to create a yellow dye bath when boiled with water.

Alfalfa seed
Sandy Huffaker / Getty Images

Barberry Bark

Barberry is a popular landscape shrub because it will grow under almost any condition. The foliage is often dark red but bright lime green-leafed varieties are available. The shrub has thorns that should be handled with care.

To achieve a yellow dye, add barberry bark in a boiling water bath.

Barberry
Cristina Alexandr Borcea / Getty Images

Bay Leaves

Bay leaf, Laurus nobilis, originated in Asia Minor and spread to other similar climates. The laurel tree was very important in many ancient mythologies that glorify the tree as a symbol of honor.

Bay leaves are used fresh or dried in cooking for their distinctive flavor and fragrance. The same leaves can be used to produce a yellow dye bath with boiling water. Fresh leaves can be picked or dried leaves can be purchased for dye.

Bay leaves
Tom Grill / Getty Images

Burdock

Burdock, Arctium, is a part of the thistle family and native to Europe. The plants have dark green leaves that are woolly underneath. The seed burrs of these plants catch on the fur of animals and human clothing.

In the early 1940s, George de Mestral, a Swiss inventor, became curious about the burrs on his clothing and dog's fur. Examining them under a microscope, he observed the hook-and-loop system that the seeds use to attach to fabrics. The results of his observations became Velcro. Those same burrs when boiled with water become a yellow dye bath.

Burdock
Peter Kindersley / Getty Images

Celery

Celery, Apium graveolens, is a plant and vegetable familiar to most everyone. It is now widely cultivated to flavor soups, stews, and to eat raw. Celery leaves were part of the garlands found in the tomb of pharaoh Tutankhamun (who died in 1323 B.C.).

Those same celery leaves can be boiled with water to create a yellow dye bath.

Celery
Dani Daniar / Getty Images

Chameleon Plant

Chameleon plant, Houttuynia cordata, is also called English lizard tail, heartleaf, fishwort, and bishop's weed. It is a flowering plant native to the Far East. The plant grows well in moist to wet soil and even slightly submerged in water in partial or full sun. It has been cultivated for temperate garden use.

To create a golden dye, the entire plant is steeped in boiling water.

chameleon plant
Susan Edwards / Getty Images

Crocus

Crocus, C. chrysanthus, is a genus in the iris family. Most bloom as a harbinger of spring during the late winter months. They are native to woodlands and meadows around the world in temperate areas. Bulbs are simple to plant and can be purchased online.

The plentiful yellow crocus produces a yellow dye bath when the petals are boiled with water.

Yellow crocus
Ernst Haas / Getty Images

Daffodil

Daffodil, Narcissus, is a spring-flowering bulb in the Amaryllis family. The traditional daffodil bloom of folklore, poetry, and field is yellow to golden-yellow. However, daffodils have been bred to produce different colors and double or triple blooms.

To produce a yellow dye, use the flower heads after they have dried with an alum mordant in boiling water.

Daffodils
Matt Cardy / Getty Images

Dahlia

The dahlia is a bushy, tuberous perennial plant native to Mexico, Central America, and Colombia related to the sunflower, daisy, chrysanthemum, and zinnia. They are mainly grown as garden plants and are brightly colored, displaying most hues except for blue.

The red, yellow, and orange flowers can be used fresh or dried to make a yellow to orange dye when boiled with water.

yellow dahlia
Katja Halbauer / Getty Images

Dandelion

Dandelions, Taraxacum, are native to Eurasia and North America. They are characterized by bright yellow flowers and leaves with a ragged sawtooth look and a deep taproot. 

Dandelion flowers produce a yellow dye bath when boiled in water; while the roots will produce a warm brown dye. 

Dandelion
Martin Ruegner / Getty Images

Dyer's Greenwood

Greenwood, Genista tinctoria, is a low mounding plant with snapdragon-like electric yellow spring flowers. Blooms are incredibly showy and last for three to six weeks depending upon the weather. The bright green arching stems produce a yellow dye bath when boiled in water.

dyers greenwood
Image Source / Getty Images

Goldenrod

Goldenrod, Solidago, is a very common wildflower found throughout the United States. Goldenrods are late bloomers, flowering in late summer into the fall. They are all perennials with large clusters of small yellow flowers. 

Goldenrod flowers can produce a yellow dye when boiled with water. Goldenrod shoots gathered in early spring will make a deep brown dye when boiled in water.

Goldenrod
Westend61 / Getty Images

Heather

Heather, Calluna vulgaris, is a low-growing perennial shrub growing found widely in Europe and Asia Minor on acidic soils in open sunny areas. It has small scale leaves and mauve flowers. It is now a very popular ornamental plant in gardens.

Rather than the flowers, it is the whole heather plant that is used to produce a yellow dye bath when boiled with water.

heather
Adam Haglund / Getty Images

Hickory Leaves

Hickory trees, Carya, can be found from China and India to the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Hickory flowers are small, yellow-green catkins produced in spring. The fruit is an oval nut enclosed in a four-valved husk, which splits open at maturity.

The leaves produce a brilliant yellow show in the autumn and if boiled in a large quantity with salted water produce a bright yellow dye.

hickory leaves
Simon Montgomery / Getty Images

Mahonia Roots

Oregon Grape, Mahonia, is an evergreen shrub native to eastern Asia, the Himalayas, North America, and Central America. It is found both wild and cultivated for landscapes. It produces yellow flowers in autumn, winter, and early spring and blue-black berries that resemble grapes.

It is the roots that will produce a yellow dye when boiled with water.

mahonia
Julie Lee / Getty Images

Marigold

Marigold, Tagetes, is one of the most common summer garden plants. The flowers are rich in the orange-yellow carotenoid lutein which is used as a food coloring in the European Union for foods such as pasta, oil, margarine, dairy products, and citrus juice. In the United States, however, the powders and extracts are only approved as colorants in poultry feed.

The flowers can be gathered fresh or dried to create a yellow dye bath with boiling water.

Marigolds
George Rose / Getty Images

Mullen

Mullen, Verbascum thapsus, is most commonly considered a weed. It is native to Eurasia but was introduced to the United States by early settlers.

Mullen is a biennial that grows only leaves the first year and then flowers and dies the second year. During the first year, it can produce 18-inch long wooly gray leaves that form a bushel basket-sized rosette. The roots and leaves when combined with boiling water produces a pale yellow dye bath.

Mullen
David A.Cavagnaro / Getty Images

Old Man's Beard Lichen

Old Man's Beard, Usnea, is a lichen not to be confused with Spanish Moss. It grows worldwide and has been used medicinally for thousands of years as an antibiotic and antifungal.

The lichen, depending upon its growing conditions, can produce a yellow to orange dye bath when boiled with water.

old mans beard
Raymond Gehman / Getty Images

Osage Orange

Osage Orange, Maclura pomifera, also called hedge apple or Horse apple, is a small deciduous tree or large shrub related to the mulberry family. The fruit is roughly spherical and bumpy filled with a sticky white latex sap. In fall, the fruit turns a bright yellow-green.

The wood and bark will produce a pale yellow dye when boiled with water.

osage orange
Raquel Minwell / Getty Images

Oxalis

Oxalis is part of the wood-sorrel family and occurs throughout most of the world, except for the polar areas. Many varieties produce white, pink, red, or yellow flowers.

To produce a yellow dye bath, use the yellow flower heads with a bit of the stem in boiling water. The dye will be nearly fluorescent yellow and becomes colorfast with alum mordant.

oxalis
Diana Mayrona / Getty Images

Peach Tree Leaves

While the fruit of the peach tree, Prunus persica, is usually the prize, it is the leaves that will produce a yellow dye bath when boiled in water.

peach tree
Cosmo Condina / Getty Images

Red Clover

Red Clover, Trifolium pratense, is native to Europe, Western Asia, and northwest Africa but has been naturalized in many other regions. It is an herbaceous, short-lived perennial plant with dark pink flowers with a paler base.

It is widely grown as a fodder crop and to increase nitrogen in the soil. The entire plant will produce a golden dye when combined with an alum mordant in boiling water.

Red Clover
Danita Delimont / Getty Images

Safflower

Safflower, Carthamus tinctorius, is a thistle-like annual. It is commercially cultivated for vegetable oil extracted from the seeds and as bird food. The plants have yellow, orange, or red flower heads with one to five flowers on each branch. 

Before the development of synthetic dyes, safflower was grown for its seeds and used for coloring and flavoring foods and making yellow fabric dyes. The flowers soaked in water will release the yellow dye.

safflower
Diana Lunden / Getty Images

Sassafras Bark

The Sassafras tree, Sassafras albidum, is native to eastern North America from Ontario to central Florida. It is a medium-sized deciduous tree with bark that is thick, dark red-brown, and deeply furrowed. A yellow dye can be extracted from the wood and bark when boiled in water.

Sassafras shoots are used to flavor root beer and the dried and ground leaves are known as filé powder used for thickening sauces and soups in Cajun and Creole cooking.

sassafras
Mark Turner / Getty Images

Saffron

Saffron is a spice derived from the flower of Crocus sativus or the saffron crocus. Most produce three or four flowers that each have three vivid crimson stigmas. The stigmas are gathered and dried to use in cooking as a seasoning and coloring agent. Because each flower's stigmas need to be collected by hand and there are only a few per flower, saffron is the most expensive spice in the world.

It is also one of the best yellow fabric dyes when set with alum. Saffron can be purchased to use as a dye.

saffron
Maximillian Stock Ltd / Getty Images

St. John's Wort

St. John's Wort, Hypericum perforatum, is often known as an over-the-counter treatment for mild depression. But for many years the flowers and leaves of the common St. John's Wort, which can be found in almost every country, were gathered to create a gold or yellow dye when boiled in water.

st. johns wort
Westend61 / Getty Images

Sumac Bark

Sumacs, Rhus, grow in subtropical and temperate regions throughout the world, especially in Africa and North America. 

Almost every part of the common sumac plant can be used to create dyes. The leaves will produce a tan or very light brown dye but the inner pith of sumac branches produce a bright yellow dye when boiled with water.

sumac
Franz Marc Frei / Getty Images

Sunflowers

The sunflower, Helianthus annuus, is an annual plant native to the Americas. The sunflower is named for its ability to follow the sun in the course of a day. To create a yellow dye bath, use the entire flower head while it is fresh. Combine with boiling water to extract the dye. Do not wait until the sunflower seeds are dry.

sunflowers
Ratchada Prakobdee / Getty Images

Syrian Rue

Syrian Rue, Peganum harmala, is native from the eastern Mediterranean region east to India. It was first planted in the United States in 1928 in the state of New Mexico by a farmer wanting to manufacture the dye "Turkish Red" from its seeds.

However, when the seeds are boiled with water, a yellow fluorescent dye is obtained. It takes an alcohol bath to obtain a red dye. The seeds can be purchased in bulk to create dyes.

Syrian rue
Martina Katz / Getty Images

Tansy

Tansy, Tanacetum vulgare, is a perennial, herbaceous flowering plant of the aster family native to temperate Europe and Asia. It is also known as Bitter Buttons, Cow Bitter, Mugwort, or Golden Buttons. It has become an invasive weed in many areas.

The flowers will produce a yellow dye bath when combined with boiling water.

Tansy
Roel Meijer / Getty Images

Turmeric

Turmeric is from the ginger family and native to Southeast Asia. The rhizomes of the plant are gathered, boiled, and dried to produce a spice used in cooking. The bright yellow powder can also be used as a fabric dye by dissolving it in hot water. The depth of color can be controlled by the amount of turmeric used.

Turmeric powder and fresh turmeric in wood bowls on wooden table.
manusapon kasosod / Getty Images

Willow Leaves

The weeping willow tree, Salix, loves full sun, moist soil, and grows to a height and width of 35-50' on average, with a weeping shape. The leaves, when boiled with water will produce a yellow dye. It is a brittle tree and drops lots of twigs and bark which are great for making peachy-brown dye baths. 

Weeping Willow Tree
Jon Paul Perry / Getty Images

Yarrow

Yarrow, Achillea millefolium, is a flowering plant native to the Northern Hemisphere. It grows wild and has been cultivated for garden plantings. The flowers can range from white to pink to yellow.

The entire plant including roots, leaves, stems, and flowers is used to produce a yellow dye bath with boiling water.

yarrow
Chris Burrows / Getty Images

Yellow Dock Roots

Yellow Dock, Rumex crispus, is a widespread naturalized plant throughout the temperate world including North America, southern South America, New Zealand, and parts of Australia.

The deep taproots will produce a yellow to mustard-colored dye bath with boiling water. The leaves, flowers, and seeds, when boiled in water, produce varying shades of brown dye. 

dock
John Lawson / Getty Images

Yellow Onions

Yellow onions, Allium cepa, are full-flavored and used in the food of many cultures. The skins are a golden yellow and when boiled in quantity with water and set with alum produce a yellow to deep orange dye.

yellow onion
Max Brouwers / Getty Images