Dye garden

So much is happening in the garden. I can’t keep up. But I have to post about the dye garden. This is the first year I’ve tried to grow plants specifically for dyeing.

Dye garden looking toward grape arbor

I planted this bed on June 14 from seedlings started on May 31. Much too late. Some plants caught up and are blooming, others are struggling. The tall plant and best performer so far is the garland serrated chrysanthemum. Second best is the dyer’s coreopsis. These seeds came from Grand Prismatic Seeds in Utah.

Safflower just starting to bloom

There are a lot of buds on the safflower. It’s an interesting plant, new to me.

First bloom on Tango cosmos

I’m looking forward to growing much more of this cosmos. The flowers are stunning and the dyeing power is strong. I won’t be using it to dye until I get more than one flower!

Fly on chrysanthemum

This is my star, the serrated chrysanthemum. I heard about this plant from Suzanne Grosjean. I’ll grow this again.

Dyer’s coreopsis with dyer’s chamomile foliage in background

I love the deep reds and yellows of these flowers. Will grow again. I’m not sure what’s happening with the chamomile. Its foliage is lush, but no flowers.

St. John’s wort, hypericum, growing wild outside the bed

Seeming to know it belonged here! I was really gratified to see this volunteer St. John’s wort growing next to the dye bed. The flowers are so pretty. I haven’t dyed with it but I saw a video by India Flint showing her use of it in the being (t)here course. The video is called “local colour.”

Other plants in the dye bed that are languishing are black night scabiosa and black hollyhock. I’ll keep at it with these as I’d really like to grow them.

  • More dye plants are growing outside the dye bed in the main garden. Most significant is goldenrod, which I didn’t plant. Also:
    • Hopi black dye sunflower which is growing tall but not blooming yet
    • Shades of Gold marigold – huge plants, very happy in the garden, but only a few flowers so far
    Healthy stand of goldenrod inside the garden in the flower border

    I’m having trouble keeping up with the garden let alone dyeing, but I did manage to use some of the chrysanthemum and coreopsis recently. This silk broadcloth strip must have been mordanted with iron earlier (the importance of keeping records!), because the prints turned out very dark. These dark silhouettes have their own beauty though.

    Dyed silk with coreopsis and chrysanthemum sprigs

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