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Dyeing with Walnut Hulls — Ancient Brown Dye
Charlie

Created by

Charlie

19. අප්‍රේල් 2026DE
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Dyeing with Walnut Hulls — Ancient Brown Dye

Walnut hulls produce one of the most ancient and reliable brown dyes known. The active compound juglone bonds directly to fibre without needing a mordant — one of the very few dyes that does this. The colour ranges from warm tan to deep chocolate brown depending on concentration and soak time. Walnut dye is extremely lightfast and washfast, making it one of the most permanent natural dyes. This blueprint covers extracting the dye from fresh or dried hulls, preparing the dye bath, and dyeing wool to a rich, warm brown.

ආරම්භක
3-4 hours

Instructions

1

Collect Walnut Hulls

Collect fresh green or blackened walnut hulls — approximately 500 g for every 100 g of fibre to dye

Materials for this step:

Walnut Hulls (Green/Black)Walnut Hulls (Green/Black)500 grams

Tools needed:

Leather GlovesLeather Gloves
2

Break Open Hulls

Break or crush the hulls into smaller pieces to expose more surface area — wear gloves, juglone stains skin brown

Tools needed:

HammerstoneHammerstone
3

Fill Dye Pot

Place the crushed hulls in a large pot and cover with cold water — use enough to fully submerge the fibre later

Step 3 - Image 1

Materials for this step:

WaterWater10 litres

Tools needed:

Stock PotStock Pot
4

Soak Overnight

Let the hulls soak in cold water for 12-24 hours — the water will turn dark brown as juglone leaches out

5

Simmer the Bath

Heat the dye bath slowly to a gentle simmer (80-90°C) and hold for 1 hour to extract maximum colour

Materials for this step:

FirewoodFirewood1 bundle
6

Strain Out Hulls

Strain the dye bath through cloth to remove all hull fragments — the liquid should be very dark brown

Tools needed:

Cloth (Straining)Cloth (Straining)
7

Reheat Strained Bath

Return the strained dye liquid to the pot and reheat to 70°C

Step 7 - Image 1
8

Wet the Fibre

Thoroughly wet the wool skein in warm water — this ensures even dye penetration with no dry spots

Materials for this step:

Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)100 grams
9

Enter the Dye Bath

Lower the wetted fibre gently into the walnut dye bath, pressing it below the surface

10

Simmer for 1 Hour

Heat to 80°C and hold for 1 hour, turning the fibre gently every 15 minutes

11

Check Depth of Colour

Lift the fibre to check — it will dry lighter than it looks wet, so aim darker than your target shade

12

Extend for Darker Brown

For a deeper chocolate brown, leave the fibre in the cooling dye bath overnight

13

Remove and Rinse

Remove the dyed fibre and rinse in progressively cooler water until the water runs clear

Materials for this step:

WaterWater10 litres
14

Squeeze Gently

Squeeze out excess water between your palms — do not wring or twist the dyed wool

15

Dry in Shade

Hang the dyed skein in shade to dry completely — the finished walnut brown is one of the most permanent natural dyes known

Step 15 - Image 1

Materials

4

Tools Required

4

CC0 Public Domain

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