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Dyeing Blue-Purple with Red Cabbage — The Kitchen-Chemistry pH Indicator Dye
Tex

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Tex

22. mai 2026FO
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Dyeing Blue-Purple with Red Cabbage — The Kitchen-Chemistry pH Indicator Dye

Red cabbage (Brassica oleracea var. capitata f. rubra) is one of the most remarkable dye materials in the plant kingdom — not for its permanence (which is poor) but for its extraordinary pH sensitivity. The anthocyanin pigments in red cabbage change colour dramatically with pH: red in acid, purple at neutral, blue in mild alkali, green in strong alkali, and yellow at very high pH. This makes red cabbage juice one of the best natural pH indicators and a favourite of chemistry teachers worldwide.

As a textile dye, red cabbage produces blue-purple shades on alum-mordanted wool. The colour is vivid when fresh but fugitive — it fades significantly with light and washing. This limits its use for permanent textiles but makes it an ideal teaching dye for understanding dye chemistry, pH effects, and mordant interactions. A single dyeing session with red cabbage teaches more about dye chemistry than any textbook.

Red cabbage has been cultivated since at least Roman times. The wild ancestor of all cabbages (Brassica oleracea) is native to coastal Europe. Red varieties were selected for their anthocyanin-rich leaves, valued for food colour and later for dye use. The plant is available year-round in virtually every supermarket worldwide, making it the most accessible dye source for classroom and experimental dyeing.

Débutant
60-90 minutes active, overnight passive

Instructions

1

Chop the red cabbage

Use one medium red cabbage (approximately 500-800 g) for 100 g of wool. Chop the cabbage into thin strips or rough chunks — smaller pieces release pigment faster. The outer leaves are richest in anthocyanins — include them. The cabbage should be a deep purple-red throughout. Pale or mostly-green cabbages give weak results.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Red CabbageRed Cabbage1 pièce

Outils nécessaires :

Digital Kitchen ScaleDigital Kitchen Scale
2

Simmer the cabbage at 70-75°C for 30 minutes

Place the chopped cabbage in a dye pot with 4 litres of water. Bring slowly to 70-75°C and hold for 30 minutes. Do not boil — excessive heat degrades the anthocyanins. The water will turn a vivid blue-purple as the pigment dissolves. Stir occasionally. Red cabbage releases its dye rapidly — the colour change is dramatic within the first 10 minutes.

Outils nécessaires :

Stock PotStock Pot
Cooking Thermometer (0-200°C)Cooking Thermometer (0-200°C)
Wooden Stirring SpoonWooden Stirring Spoon
3

Strain out the cabbage

Strain the dye liquor through a fine mesh strainer into a clean pot. Press the cabbage to extract all remaining purple liquid. The spent cabbage will be pale and limp. The strained liquor should be a vivid blue-purple — this is the natural pH of the cabbage extract (around pH 6-7). Adding vinegar turns it red. Adding baking soda turns it blue-green. This pH responsiveness is the hallmark of red cabbage anthocyanins.

Outils nécessaires :

Fine Mesh StrainerFine Mesh Strainer
4

Dye alum-mordanted wool at 65-70°C for 45 minutes

Pre-wet the alum-mordanted wool in lukewarm water for 15 minutes, squeeze gently, and lower it into the red cabbage dye bath at room temperature. Slowly raise to 65-70°C over 15 minutes, then hold for 45 minutes. Turn gently every 10 minutes. The wool will develop a blue-purple to lavender tone. The alum mordant slightly shifts the pH and produces a bluer result than un-mordanted wool. Experiment with pH modifiers after dyeing: a brief dip in vinegar water shifts the colour toward pink, while a dip in soda water shifts toward blue-green.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)100 g
Alum (Potassium Alum)Alum (Potassium Alum)10 g
5

Cool overnight, rinse, and dry

Turn off the heat and let the wool cool in the dye bath overnight. Remove, squeeze gently, and rinse in lukewarm water until the runoff is mostly clear. The final colour is a soft blue-purple to lavender. Lightfastness is poor — red cabbage anthocyanins fade significantly within weeks of sunlight exposure. Washfastness is also limited. This makes red cabbage unsuitable for garments or items exposed to light, but ideal for educational dyeing, craft projects stored indoors, and understanding dye chemistry. The colour's pH sensitivity makes every skein a chemistry experiment. Dry in shade.

Matériaux

3

Outils requis

5

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