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Dyeing with Onion Skins — Orange-Gold from the Kitchen
Charlie

Created by

Charlie

19. अप्रिल 2026DE
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Dyeing with Onion Skins — Orange-Gold from the Kitchen

Onion skins are the most accessible natural dye source in the world — every kitchen has them. The dry papery outer skins of yellow onions contain quercetin, a flavonoid pigment that produces warm orange-gold to burnt amber tones on wool and other fibres. With an alum mordant the colour is bright and clear; with iron it shifts to olive-khaki. Onion skin dyeing has been practised for thousands of years for textiles and for colouring Easter eggs across Europe. This blueprint covers the full process from collecting skins through mordanting to achieving a rich, permanent orange-gold.

शुरुआती
2-3 hours

Instructions

1

Collect Onion Skins

Collect the dry papery outer skins of yellow onions — you need roughly 100 g of skins per 100 g of fibre

Step 1 - Image 1

Materials for this step:

Onion Skins (Dry, Yellow)Onion Skins (Dry, Yellow)100 grams
2

Soak Skins in Water

Place the onion skins in a dye pot, cover with cold water, and soak for 1 hour to begin releasing the pigment

Materials for this step:

WaterWater8 लिटर

Tools needed:

Stock PotStock Pot
3

Simmer the Dye Bath

Heat the dye bath slowly to 80-90°C and simmer for 45 minutes — the water will turn a deep amber

Materials for this step:

FirewoodFirewood1 गाँठो
4

Strain Out Skins

Strain the dye bath through cloth to remove all onion skin fragments

Tools needed:

Cloth (Straining)Cloth (Straining)
5

Dissolve Alum Mordant

Dissolve alum at 10% weight-of-fibre (10 g per 100 g wool) in a cup of hot water

Materials for this step:

Alum (Potassium Alum)Alum (Potassium Alum)10 grams
6

Add Mordant to Bath

Stir the dissolved alum into the strained dye bath and mix thoroughly

Step 6 - Image 1
7

Wet the Wool

Soak the undyed wool skein in warm water for 15 minutes so it absorbs dye evenly

Materials for this step:

Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)Wool Yarn Skein (Undyed)100 grams
8

Enter the Dye Bath

Lower the wetted wool into the onion skin dye bath, pressing it gently below the surface

9

Simmer for 45 Minutes

Heat to 80°C and hold for 45 minutes, turning the wool every 10 minutes for even colour

10

Check the Colour

Lift a section to check — the wool should be a rich orange-gold when wet, drying slightly lighter

11

Deepen if Desired

For a deeper burnt orange, simmer for an additional 30 minutes or leave in the cooling bath overnight

12

Iron Modifier (Optional)

For an olive-khaki shift, dissolve 2 g ferrous sulfate in water and add to a separate rinse — dip the dyed wool briefly

Step 12 - Image 1

Materials for this step:

Ferrous SulfateFerrous Sulfate2 grams
13

Rinse Thoroughly

Rinse the dyed wool in progressively cooler water until the water runs clear

Materials for this step:

WaterWater10 लिटर
14

Squeeze Gently

Squeeze excess water out between your palms — never wring or twist dyed wool

15

Dry in Shade

Hang the orange-gold dyed wool in shade to dry completely — onion skin dye with alum mordant is very lightfast

Materials

6

Tools Required

2

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