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Dyeing Purple with Alkanet Root — The Mediterranean Pigment of Antiquity
Tex

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Tex

21. mai 2026FO
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Dyeing Purple with Alkanet Root — The Mediterranean Pigment of Antiquity

Alkanet (Alkanna tinctoria) is a low-growing plant of the borage family native to the Mediterranean basin. Its roots contain alkannin, a naphthoquinone pigment closely related to shikonin from the East Asian Lithospermum erythrorhizon. Both plants have been used as dye and cosmetic sources for thousands of years — alkannin gives a purple-red to mauve-grey colour on wool that was valued in ancient Greece, Rome, and throughout the medieval Mediterranean.

Pliny the Elder describes alkanet root as a cosmetic and colouring agent. In the medieval period, alkanet was used both as a textile dye and as a colourant for oils, waxes, and wood stains. The pigment is unusual among plant dyes because it is more soluble in oil and alcohol than in water. For textile dyeing, an alkaline water extraction is needed — alkannin dissolves in basic solutions (pH 9-10), releasing its purple colour. On alum-mordanted wool, the resulting shade ranges from soft mauve to purple-grey, depending on pH and concentration.

Alkanet root dye is not the most vibrant purple — it tends toward muted, dusky tones rather than vivid violet. But these soft, complex purples are beautiful in their own right and pair well with the warm yellows and browns from other plant dyes. Alkanet is one of the few European plant sources that produces any shade of purple without requiring the complex fermentation vats of orchil lichen or woad over-dyeing.

Avancé
120 minutes active, overnight passive

Instructions

1

Weigh and chop the alkanet root

Use 100-150% WOF of dried alkanet root. For 100 g of wool, weigh out 100-150 g of dried root. Alkanet root is sold as dried, chopped root pieces that are dark reddish-brown to almost black on the outside. Cut or break any large pieces into 1-2 cm fragments to increase surface area for extraction. The root will stain your fingers purple-red on handling — wear gloves if this is a concern.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Alkanet Root (Dried)Alkanet Root (Dried)120 g

Outils nécessaires :

Digital Kitchen ScaleDigital Kitchen Scale
Rubber GlovesRubber Gloves
2

Soak the roots overnight in alkaline water

Place the chopped roots in a dye pot with 4 litres of warm water. Add 5 g of sodium carbonate (soda ash) and stir to dissolve. The soda ash raises the pH to approximately 9-10, which is necessary because alkannin is poorly soluble in neutral or acidic water. In alkaline solution, the pigment dissolves and the water will turn a deep reddish-purple within hours. Soak for 8-12 hours. By morning, the liquid should be a dark, opaque purple-red.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Sodium Carbonate (soda ash)Sodium Carbonate (soda ash)5 g

Outils nécessaires :

Stock PotStock Pot
3

Simmer the roots at 80°C for 60 minutes

Bring the alkaline root bath to a gentle simmer (75-80°C) and hold for 60 minutes. Do not boil — high temperatures degrade alkannin and shift the colour toward muddy brown. Stir occasionally. The liquid will deepen to an intensely dark purple-red. Alkanet roots extract slowly compared to flower or leaf dyes — the full 60 minutes of simmering is needed to draw out the pigment from the dense root tissue.

Outils nécessaires :

Cooking Thermometer (0-200°C)Cooking Thermometer (0-200°C)
Wooden Stirring SpoonWooden Stirring Spoon
4

Strain out the roots

Strain the dye liquor through a fine mesh strainer into a clean pot. Press the roots to extract all remaining purple liquid. Root fragments can stain wool unevenly if left in contact — strain thoroughly. The strained liquid should be a deep, clear purple-red. At this stage, the alkaline pH means the colour appears very red. When the wool enters and the pH shifts slightly during dyeing, the colour will lean more toward purple and mauve on the fibre.

Outils nécessaires :

Fine Mesh StrainerFine Mesh Strainer
5

Dye alum-mordanted wool at 75-80°C for 60 minutes

Pre-wet the alum-mordanted wool in lukewarm water for 15 minutes. Lower it into the alkanet dye bath at room temperature and slowly raise to 75-80°C. Hold for 60 minutes, turning gently every 10 minutes. The alum mordant interacts with alkannin to produce the characteristic purple-grey to mauve shades. The colour develops slowly — do not rush this step. Alkanet colours are inherently muted and complex rather than vivid. Expect a soft, dusky purple-mauve rather than a bright violet.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)100 g
Alum (Potassium Alum)Alum (Potassium Alum)10 g
6

Cool overnight, rinse, and dry

Turn off the heat and leave the wool in the dye bath overnight. The extended cooling allows the alkannin-alum complex to stabilise fully on the fibre. Remove, squeeze gently, and rinse in lukewarm water. The rinse water will be faintly pink — some washoff is normal with alkanet. The final colour is a soft, dusky mauve to purple-grey — one of the most subtle and sophisticated colours in the natural dyer's palette. Lightfastness is moderate. Dry in shade.

Matériaux

4

Outils requis

6

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