HOW TO USE OAK GALL AS A TANNIN MORDANT | NATURAL DYE | ORGANIC COLOR | BEIGE TAN GRAY | IRON WATER

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2024
  • If you are lucky enough to find oak galls while foraging, grab a handful for your dye pot! The oak gall is full of tannin and is a great way to pretreat your textiles, especially plant (cellulose) fibers like cotton, linen, bamboo and hemp, to create stronger color bonds with natural dyes. The 'mordant' process is an extra, but important, step to help organic color last longer and protect it from fading with exposure to light and wash. Oak galls are a great option because they leave very little color on the fiber, but pack a tannin punch. You can also create beautiful grays using an iron water modifier with oak gall tannin. This video tutorial will show you how to treat fiber with oak gall tannin as a mordant, test it with hibiscus dye and shift colors to a full spectrum of light and bluish grays with iron. We will also test oak gall and hibiscus dye on wooden beads to add color to earthy handmade jewelry.
    CHAPTERS
    0:00 Introduction - Oak gall
    2:11 Oak gall tannin mordant
    3:55 Tannin + iron
    5:08 What exactly is an oak gall?
    6:10 Tutorial highlights
    7:25 How to make an oak gall tannin mordant - cold & hot soak
    9:21 How to make hibiscus dye
    9:49 How to dye wooden beads - oak gall tannin, hibiscus & iron
    12:34 How shift color with iron water
    14:04 Fiber swatch & wooden bead results
    15:58 Recap
    20:41 Sneak peek of next tutorial
    21:34 Blooper
    SUPPLY LIST
    Oak gall - whole or ground
    Hibiscus flowers - dried
    Iron powder and/or homemade iron rust water
    Gloves
    Mortar & pestle
    Pot with lid
    Measuring cup
    Measuring spoon
    Strainer
    Spoon
    Bowl
    Scale
    Glass jars
    Fiber
    Wooden beads
    COOKIN' COLOR DIGITAL COURSE - Self-paced video workshop on the basics of natural dyeing and a step-by-step demonstration of an ombre dip-dye technique on textile: www.margaretbyrd.com/cookin-c...
    DOWNLOAD FREE NATURAL DYER'S QUICK START GUIDE - 11 tips to a successful natural dye practice: margaretbyrd.ck.page/natural-...
    DOWNLOAD FREE COOKIN' COLOR BREW BOOKLET - 4 natural dyes to make from food in your kitchen: margaretbyrd.ck.page/cookin-c...
    OAK GALL & IRON POWDER - Where to buy
    botanicalcolors.com/
    ABOUT MY CHANNEL
    Color Quest is a creative channel where we explore the wide world of natural color! If you love using organic materials in all of your arts & crafts projects, join me as I share tutorials and vlogs on how to find and create a rainbow of color from plants and the earth they live in.
    I'm passionate about natural dyes and pigments which I use extensively in my art practice, so I'm thrilled to share my curiosity, excitement and knowledge of nature's palette with you.
    xoxo - Margaret, aka Byrdie
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Комментарии • 28

  • @dianedaoust8472
    @dianedaoust8472 2 года назад

    thank you just discovered your channel ! Very informative and clear ..step by step so grateful !

  • @bjchadwick4261
    @bjchadwick4261 2 года назад +1

    Very interesting information. Thanks!

  • @somepinkflowers
    @somepinkflowers 2 года назад

    So useful. 🌸 Watching it twice. 💕💕

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  2 года назад

      That is twice as nice! Many thanks for all your natural dyeing juju 💕

  • @KimClark-1
    @KimClark-1 Год назад

    Very interesting demonstration!

  • @nadaelmurshidy2510
    @nadaelmurshidy2510 Год назад

    Thank you so much for sharing

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      My pleasure, Nada! Thank you for your sweet words and for joining us here at Color Quest all the way from Egypt 🤎

  • @sivrebekkaholst3640
    @sivrebekkaholst3640 Год назад

    Hi so interesting! Im doing a similar project with oak galls and was wondering if you ever tried with the 20%, 30% ?

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      To be honest, I'm not sure, but I suspect not. Give it a try and let us know how it goes. Seems it would just create richer and deeper results 🤎

  • @dorinases
    @dorinases Год назад +1

    Thank you! Does the alum mordant wash away from the fabric if washed? Or there would be residue of aluminum in fabric?

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      You're welcome! No, once you've treated fabric with a mordant, it adheres to the fiber and will not wash out.

  • @bronsonleiro
    @bronsonleiro Год назад

    Hey there, I was wondering your opinion on using oak gall powder as a mordant instead of soymilk, or if maybe you think both would be worth doing. I have been looking to dye without mineral salts, and I did a few jackets from your soymilk method + yellow onion skin. Has turned out very well, but I now found a source for oak gall powder and some research suggests it may be a good substitute if not work better. Would love to here your input. Thanks in general you have been a pivotal source of information

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      Hiya! So great to have you here at Color Quest and thanks for your question. Tannin is an excellent source of a plant-based binder if you want to avoid traditional mordant salts like alum. Gallo tannin is a wonderful choice because it is light in color which doesn't typically influence the dye result on fiber. Soy milk is a great alternative and used widely across the globe, but tannins are considered on par with mineral salts and often used in conjunction with them. If you have tannin, go for it!

  • @nirjamohunta4102
    @nirjamohunta4102 Год назад +1

    Hi I dipped my silk in alum. And also added some madder powder. Will soak it overnight. Will this work. Shall place leaves in the morning then steam.

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      Hi Nirja - how did your experiment go? Madder is quite strong, so it is possible that a cold soak would work for the color to bond to the fiber. It's wonderful that you are being creative and trying new things in your dye studio - that is how you discover what works and what you love 🌼

    • @nirjamohunta4102
      @nirjamohunta4102 Год назад +1

      @@MargaretByrdColorQuest do send me your e mail I shall send you pics of the experiment.

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      @@nirjamohunta4102 Hi NIrja - you can find my contact details in the About section here on my channel.

  • @RachelRamey
    @RachelRamey Год назад +1

    Can you use tea as a mordant like this?

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад +1

      Great question, Rachel. Yes, many teas have a high tannin content, like black and green teas, so it could be used to help bind color. It won't be as strong using a metal salt like alum, but it is a good option to use the natural power of tannins.

    • @RachelRamey
      @RachelRamey Год назад

      Thank you!

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Год назад

      @@RachelRamey You are most welcome!

  • @marin706
    @marin706 Месяц назад +1

    My oak gall is not hard like that it’s more like a thin shell

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  Месяц назад

      You might be lucky if it is easier to grind 😊 I know there are many types of oak gall, so test it out and see how it works for you.

  • @JM_Lauderdale
    @JM_Lauderdale 2 месяца назад +1

    It's an oak gall. Oak trees get this abnormality by a female wasp inserting their eggs into the tree buds.

    • @MargaretByrdColorQuest
      @MargaretByrdColorQuest  2 месяца назад

      Welcome to Color Quest! Many thanks for sharing more about the magic of oak galls 🐝