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Making Woad Blue Pigment — Europe's Ancient Blue Before Indigo
Charlie

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Charlie

22. Mei 2026DE
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Making Woad Blue Pigment — Europe's Ancient Blue Before Indigo

Woad (Isatis tinctoria) is a European flowering plant whose leaves contain the blue pigment indigotin — the same chemical compound found in tropical indigo (Indigofera tinctoria), but in much lower concentration. Woad was Europe's primary source of blue colour from at least the Bronze Age until the importation of tropical indigo in the 16th-17th centuries. The Celts and Picts famously used woad for body painting (Julius Caesar noted that the Britons dyed themselves blue for battle), and medieval Europe's woad trade was an enormous industry — the 'blue gold' that built the fortunes of cities like Toulouse, Erfurt, and Amiens.

While woad is most commonly discussed as a textile DYE (used with a fermentation vat), it can also be processed into a pigment for painting. The pigment form — woad blue — is extracted from the leaves by fermentation and alkaline extraction, then settled and dried into a concentrated pigment cake. This pigment can be ground and used in egg tempera, gum arabic (watercolour), or oil. The colour is a soft, somewhat greyish blue — less intense than tropical indigo or mineral blues like azurite, but with a gentle, atmospheric quality prized in medieval painting.

Kati
3-4 hours active, 3-5 days fermentation

Maagizo

1

Harvest fresh woad leaves

Harvest the leaves of Isatis tinctoria in the first year of growth, before the plant flowers (flowering diverts the plant's energy from leaf pigment production). Pick the large rosette leaves — they have the highest indigotin content. The best harvest is in mid-summer when the leaves are largest and most actively photosynthesising. You need a large quantity: approximately 2-3 kg of fresh leaves yields only a small amount of pigment, as woad contains roughly 0.2-0.5% indigotin by weight of fresh leaf (compared to 2-4% in tropical indigo). Process immediately after harvest — the indigotin precursors in the leaves degrade within hours.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Woad LeavesWoad Leaves3 kg
2

Extract the indigo precursor by hot water infusion

Tear the fresh woad leaves into small pieces and place in a large container. Pour over hot water (70-80°C — not boiling, which degrades the precursor). Use enough water to fully submerge the leaves, approximately 5 liters for 3 kg of leaves. Let steep for 1-2 hours, stirring occasionally. The water turns a dark yellow-green as the indigo precursor (indican and isatan B) dissolves from the leaf cells. After steeping, strain out the leaves through cheesecloth, squeezing firmly to extract all liquid. Discard the spent leaves (compost them). The liquid contains the colourless precursor that will be converted to blue pigment.

Zana zinazohitajika:

Fine CheeseclothFine Cheesecloth
Stirring Rod (wooden)Stirring Rod (wooden)
3

Add alkali and aerate to form blue pigment

Add slaked lime (calcium hydroxide) to the strained liquid — approximately 10-15 g per liter. Stir well. The lime raises the pH to approximately 10-11, which is necessary for the chemical conversion of the colourless precursors to indigotin. Now vigorously aerate the liquid: pour it back and forth between two containers from a height, or whisk it energetically for 15-20 minutes. Air (oxygen) oxidises the colourless leuco-indigo to indigotin — the insoluble blue pigment. You will see the liquid gradually change colour from yellow-green to blue-green, then to a dark blue. A blue froth forms on the surface. When the colour no longer deepens with further aeration, the conversion is complete.

Vifaa kwa hatua hii:

Calcium Hydroxide (Slaked Lime)Calcium Hydroxide (Slaked Lime)50 g

Zana zinazohitajika:

Heat-Resistant Glass Beaker (1 liter)Heat-Resistant Glass Beaker (1 liter)
4

Settle and collect the pigment

Let the aerated blue liquid stand undisturbed for 12-24 hours. The insoluble indigotin particles slowly settle to the bottom as a dark blue sediment. Carefully pour off the clear yellow-green liquid above without disturbing the sediment. Add fresh water, stir to resuspend the sediment, and let settle again. Repeat this washing 3-4 times to remove dissolved lime, leaf sugars, and other impurities. Each washing should produce a cleaner, bluer sediment. The washed sediment is your raw woad pigment — a dark blue paste.

Zana zinazohitajika:

Glass Settling Jar (5L)Glass Settling Jar (5L)
5

Dry and store the pigment

Spread the washed blue paste on a clean cotton cloth or ceramic plate and dry in the shade at room temperature. Drying takes 2-4 days. The dried pigment forms a hard, dark blue cake. Break it up and grind to a fine powder on a glass muller. The finished woad blue pigment is a soft, somewhat grey-blue — less intense than azurite or lapis lazuli blue, but with a gentle, atmospheric quality. From 3 kg of fresh leaves, expect approximately 5-15 g of dried pigment — woad is low-yield, which is why it was so expensive historically. For painting, grind with egg yolk (tempera), gum arabic (watercolour), or linseed oil. Woad blue is lightfast and chemically stable. Store in sealed glass jars.

Zana zinazohitajika:

Clean Cotton ClothClean Cotton Cloth
Glass MullerGlass Muller
Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids

Vifaa

2

Zana Zinazohitajika

7

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