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Making Madder Lake Pigment — Precipitating Red Pigment from the Dyer's Root
Charlie

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Charlie

22. မေ 2026DE
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Making Madder Lake Pigment — Precipitating Red Pigment from the Dyer's Root

Madder lake is a red pigment made by precipitating the colourants from the root of the madder plant (Rubia tinctorum) onto an insoluble substrate — typically alumina hydrate (from alum). The process converts a water-soluble dye into an insoluble pigment that can be ground and used in paint. The distinction between a DYE and a LAKE PIGMENT is fundamental: a dye dissolves in its medium and colours by staining; a lake pigment is a dye bonded to a solid substrate, making it an opaque or semi-transparent particle that can be dispersed in oil, egg, or gum like any mineral pigment.

Madder root contains two primary colourants: alizarin (producing warm, transparent reds) and purpurin (producing more orange-red tones). By controlling pH, temperature, and the ratio of dye to substrate, the maker can shift the hue from warm scarlet-red to deep crimson-purple. The finest madder lakes were historically produced in the Netherlands ('Dutch pink' — actually a red, confusingly) and were among the most valued artist's pigments.

Madder lake is non-toxic, reasonably lightfast (particularly in oil), and produces beautiful, transparent, warm red glazes that are impossible to replicate with opaque mineral pigments. It was the standard red glaze pigment in European oil painting from the 15th century onward.

အလယ်အလတ်
4-5 hours active, overnight settling

Instructions

1

Extract the dye from madder root

Place 100 g of dried, chopped madder root in a large glass beaker and add 1 liter of water. Heat gently to 60-70°C — do NOT boil. Boiling extracts tannins and brown compounds that muddy the colour. Maintain at 60-70°C for 1-2 hours, stirring occasionally. The water turns a deep red-brown as the alizarin and purpurin dissolve. After extraction, strain through fine cheesecloth into a clean beaker, squeezing the root pulp to extract maximum colour. The filtered dye liquor should be a clear, deep red-brown.

Materials for this step:

Madder Root (Dried, Chopped)Madder Root (Dried, Chopped)100 ဂရမ်

Tools needed:

Heat-Resistant Glass Beaker (1 liter)Heat-Resistant Glass Beaker (1 liter)
Fine CheeseclothFine Cheesecloth
Stirring Rod (wooden)Stirring Rod (wooden)
2

Prepare the alum solution

Dissolve 50 g of alum (potassium aluminium sulfate, KAl(SO₄)₂·12H₂O) in 500 ml of warm water. Stir until completely dissolved — the solution should be clear and colourless. The alum provides the aluminium ions that will form alumina hydrate (Al(OH)₃) — the white, gelatinous substrate onto which the madder dye will precipitate. The ratio of alum to dye determines the depth and intensity of the final lake pigment: more alum produces a paler, more opaque lake; less alum produces a deeper, more transparent lake.

Materials for this step:

Alum (Potassium Alum)Alum (Potassium Alum)50 ဂရမ်

Tools needed:

Borosilicate BeakerBorosilicate Beaker
3

Precipitate the lake pigment

Add the alum solution to the warm madder dye liquor and stir well. Then slowly add a solution of potassium carbonate (potash) — dissolve 25 g of potash in 200 ml of water and add it drop by drop to the dye-alum mixture, stirring constantly. The potash raises the pH, causing the aluminium to precipitate as alumina hydrate gel — a white, gelatinous mass. As it precipitates, the alumina captures and binds the red madder dye molecules, forming the lake pigment. The mixture foams slightly as CO₂ is released. Continue adding potash solution slowly until no more foam is produced and the precipitate settles as a bright red mass. The clear liquid above should be only faintly coloured.

Materials for this step:

Potassium Carbonate (Potash)Potassium Carbonate (Potash)25 ဂရမ်
4

Wash the precipitate

Let the red precipitate settle overnight. Carefully pour off the clear liquid above (it contains dissolved salts). Add fresh clean water, stir, and let settle again. Repeat this washing 3-4 times until the wash water runs nearly clear. Each washing removes dissolved potassium sulfate and excess alkali. Thorough washing is important — residual salts cause the pigment to be hygroscopic (absorbing moisture from air) and can cause paint films to crack. After the final wash, filter through fine cotton cloth, collecting the bright red precipitate.

Tools needed:

Clean Cotton ClothClean Cotton Cloth
5

Dry and store the lake pigment

Spread the washed precipitate on a clean glass slab or ceramic plate and dry in the shade at room temperature. Do not use heat — high temperatures can shift the colour. Drying takes 2-3 days. The dried pigment forms a hard cake that should be a rich, warm red — ranging from scarlet to deep rose depending on the specific madder source and processing conditions. Grind to a fine powder on a glass muller. From 100 g of dried madder root, expect approximately 30-50 g of finished lake pigment. Store in sealed glass jars. Madder lake is a superb glazing pigment in oil painting — its transparency allows light to pass through and reflect off the white ground below, creating a luminous, jewel-like red glow.

Tools needed:

Glass MullerGlass Muller
Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids

Materials

3

Tools Required

7

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