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W04. BIOCHROMES

A week through the magical process of dyeing. This week we worked all together in order to experiment the process of mordancing, dyeing, making inks& pigments. Loved it.

biochromes

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"Today we started with LOT of ENTHOUSIASM and fabrics, ingredients, recipes, cooking pot, weighing machine, termometer and ACTION PLAN. Organisation, Organisation, it is paramount to be organised".

Firstly,

We selected and organised: Fabrics and Ingredients

fabrics

  • 1 piece of each fabric for all of us + 1 for the dyeing book of the textilelab .

ingredients

  • We put all the infomations on the wall (on the carton see below:)
6 Baths of 18th Fabrics
Fabrics Carrots leaf Onions Madder Annatto Nettle
Weight 248gr 194gr 283 gr 267 gr 220gr
Carded Wool x x x x xx
Co canvas weird shape x x
Light Co canvas x xx xx
Pillowcase Co x
Embroidered sheet Co/linen x x x x x
Wool stamen x x x x x
Satin of silk x x x x
Organza x x x xx
Raw silk x x x xx
Thick Co canvas x x x x x
Pongee silk x x x x x
Soft Co canvas small square x x x x x
Soft Co canvas big square x x x xx x
Baptiste Co xx x x xx
Tea towel Co x
Co node x
Baby bodie x
Swaddle x x

MORDANCING

We started wtih the mordancing part and we decided to make 3 diffrents baths in order to compare the resuls of our experiment.

Mordancing

RECIPES

1st mordancing bath
Ingredients Quantities
Leaf carrots + Onion 452g of fibers
20% of the weight in alum 90g alum
Vinegar 1L = 100g of alum 90cl vinegar
water 3L water = 100g fibers ~ 8L water)
2nd mordanting bath
Ingredients Quantities
Madder + Anato 550g of fibers
20% of the weight in alum 110g alum
water 3L water = 100g fibers ~ 8L water)
3rd mordancing bath
Ingredients Quantities
Nettle + Avocado 507g of fibers
20% of the weight in alum 100g alum
water 3L water = 100g fibers ~ 8L water
Vinegar 500ml
Calcimine 50g
Water 3L

PROCESS

We have distributed and soaked fabric groups in the three baths. Fabrics in the baths remained a minimum 45min.

AT THE END WE CAME TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THE 3rd MORDNATING BATH WERE BETTER FOR MAKING BOLD COLORS.

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DECOCTIONS

Then we weighed the different decoctions in order to make dyeing baths.

Dyeing bath

Quantities to add according
Dry dying stuff Wet dying stuff Dying extract
100% of fiber weight More of fiber weight 10% of fiber weight
Weight of different dyeing stuff for our baths
Leaf carrot 75g wet and 125g dry
Onions 44g dry (because colour is very intense)
Madder 28,3 g (extract)
Annatto 100gr dry (total weight of what we have)
Nettle 350 g
Avocado 210g dry

Except the madder, the different dyeing stuff was immersed in hot water to make the decoction. Baths remained one all night in hot water to activate the dye colour. One hour minimum of maceration is needed (the more time the better). In our case we left the baths overnight, except for the madder, which is an extract. That we did the same day.

TIPS: Do NOT boil the decoction/maceration

DYEING

Dye

  1. Raise the temperature of the dye to around 45 °
  2. Once at 45 °, we put the fabrics into the bath
  3. Then continue raising the temperature slowly/gradually to around 60/70 °maximum
  4. Once the bath temperature is around 60/70 ° - time/count 45min before taking off the textiles of the bath

TIPS: when filtering the bath we kept the ingredients for future experimentations with inks/pigments - we placed the different ingredients on cardboard and let them dry, we grinded some, as carot’s leaf and nettle, directly before drying Stir the textiles regularly in the bath Textiles should not be too tight in the bath, and be easily submerged so that the dye can act evenly on the fibers. In order to have a more uniform shade and result

Process and time followed for each bath:

Time in the dyeing bath
Ingredient IN 70° Minimum Time (45min) OUT TOTAL time in the bath after 70°
Leaf carrot 11:50 12:35 13:20 14:10 1H35
Onion 11:15 12:00 12:45 13:40 1H40
Madder 12:51 (decoction at 11:30) 13:35 14:20 15:20 1H45
Annatto 11:00 11:45 12:30 14:20 2H35
Nettle 11:55 12:40 13:25 15:25 2H45
Avocado 11:30 12:15 13:00 13:40 1H35

WASH & HANGING

Wool and silk are delicate fabrics so they need to be washed with attention to avoid thermal shock. In general, fabrics have to be well washed with clean and clear water.

Dry

We hung dying fabrics outside so they dried super quickly. It was beautiful to see the result with the light of the sun. One of the best parts of the process :)

hanging

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SAMPLING

When the fabrics were dry, we took pictures of every pieces. Then we made compositions out of it.

Last step was to organise and cut a piece of every fabrics with the different dyes in order to put it on a book. One per fabricacademers and one for the TextileLab.

For not making mistakes we drew our last board:`

fabrics2

samples

IRON EXPERIMENTS

A way to modify the obtained colours is to modify them with Iron. This will give you beautiful greys and khakis depending on which plant you used first.

iron

Recipe for a solution with 100% Iron

  • 200g Iron (sulfate)
  • 2L Vinegar
  • 100g Sodium carbonate

Be careful it blows up if you add the Sodium carbonate entirely ! You need to do it step by step. To use it for modifying the fibers' colours, you need to dilute this solution and make it with a maximum concentration of 10% Iron otherwise it will damage the fibers.

For example, if you made 1L of solution 100% Iron and you want to have 10%, you need to dilute 100mL of Iron 100% in 900mL of water (at room temperature).

INKS AND PIGMENTS

We made pigments from the red onion dye bath. Pigments can be used for inks, biomaterials, oil paint… Pigments dissolve very well in oil but not in water.

ink

RECIPE

Ingredients
Dye bath Alum Sodium carbonate
200mL 20g 5g
  • Put 200mL of dye bath in a jar
  • Dissolve 20g of alum in hot water in a pot
  • Dissolve 5g of sodium carbonate in hot water in an other pot -Put the alum solution in the jar (with the dye bath)
  • Add slowly the sodium carbonate in the jar, be careful because it may go up
  • Let the jar oppen for 2 hours

  • The solution will separate into 2 phases, one liquid and one solid. After 2 hours, it must be filtered (we used a coffee filter), then dried and grinded. We didn’t have time enough to grind it because it wasn’t dry.

Diane showed us how to make ink from red cabbage. She immersed it and boiled it in hot water. Then, we took some of the liquid and put it on paper : it gives a purple. Then, we tried to add different elements in the ink to change the colour

ink

There is another way to make ink with 90% ethanol that we didn’t tried. For instance it works very well with turmeric, we have an example of this ink in Oullins.

We also tried to make screen printing ink with Guar Gum. We mixed 200mL of madder dye bath with 20g of guar gum and we heated it up. This experiment was not successful : the mixture was too thick and viscous, moreover guar gum didn’t melt properly.

SCREEN PRINTING

Screen-printing paste = extract + water + gum + oxalic acide (anti-precipitant) + mordanting agent Preparing the gum tragacanth gum : 30g for 1L hot water guar gum: 20g for 1L hot water

Preparing the paste (for 100mL) 1g (2%) to 5g(5%) of extract | 50mL hot water | 5g alum | 0,5g oxalic acide | 50 mL gum

For textiles made of cellulose, you need to add a third of the volume of beaten egg whites to the paste. Then, after screen printing with this paste, you have to fix the screen printed pattern by putting the fabric in steam for at least one hour. Note : If you are working on textiles which are already naturally dyed, you can add Iron to the paste (with the same extract). The screen printed pattern will appear the same colour but darker. Note : this paste isn't opaque ! The chosen colour will blend with the background's colour. For instance, if you screen print blue on a yellow fabric, the screen printed pattern will turn out to be green. Note : the screen printed patterns are printed into the fibers (not only on the surface)

KOMBUCHA/Surzana

In order to get ready for the week of Biomaterials, we started our Kombucha.

*RECIPE

Ingredients for 1L of water
Tea Sugar Vinegar Scouby mother
1,5 to 3 gr 100 gr from 0 to 100ml depending on PH 1

In our case as we want a little bigger of a piece of Kombucha material, so we made 7L of water.

Ingredients for 7L of water
Black tea (+ filter bag) Sugar Vinegar Scouby mother
21 gr 700 gr Vinegar - we added around 100 ml of vinegar untill it got to PH 3 15cm ø

Steps: Prepare all the ingredients, tools, utensils that you need at your workspace.

First we sterilise our equipment, especially the tray where you gonna grow your material and make sure that all is clean as Kombucha can get contaminated by various microorganisms around us.

We boil water in a pot and add tea into it and keep boiling a bit, in our case we didn't have extra pots, so we added boiling water directly in a plastic tray and then we added tea in a coffee filter bag closed with a thread that leaves don't go all over.

And then we add sugar and mix it well until it dissolves, the best to do is to add it while its hot, it will work better.

Now its time to let it cool down until room temperature, for us it took almost 2 hours for 7L of water. If we add Scoby into hot liquid it will most likely kill it, so we better wait.

When our liquid has reached the room temperature we meausure the PH with PH strips or PH meter, french tap water meauseres around PH 7. So we added around 100 ml of Vinegar until it got to PH 3.

And now when we set up good sweet, acicid conditions we can add our Mother Scoby, make sure you do it with gloves or desinfected hands.

We cover it with thin breatable cotton fabric that insects and dust can't get in, put elastic around that its well covered and can be easily open for our weekly check-ups.

Place it in a warm (ideally 30' degrees Celsium) temperature, we put it on a specail matrass for germination of seeds. The speed of growth depends on the temperature of the ambiance.

And the last important thing - don't move the tray while the Kombucha is growing, keep it in a dedicated place. The desired Kombucha material will appear in about few days - week as a thin layer. The second part of the Kombucha travel will be later on the Biomaterials week.

Discoveries of the week

  • Aurélia Wolf Wole

  • Woola la See bellow a video of ecoprint, I'm a big fan of it. Woola la

  • Harumi: Here is a video of Harumitextile I failed in love with her work.

Last update: 2022-06-22