Turkey red is a dyeing method that was widely used to give cotton a distinctive bright red colour in the 18th and 19th centuries. It was made using the root of the rubia (madder) plant, through a long and laborious process which originated in the historical Levant region, namely being developed in India and China. Turkey red was brought to Europe in the 1740s and in France was known as rouge d'Andrinople.
Turkey red | |
---|---|
Color coordinates | |
Hex triplet | #A91101 |
sRGBB (r, g, b) | (169, 17, 1) |
HSV (h, s, v) | (6°, 99%, 66%) |
CIELChuv (L, C, h) | (36, 114, 13°) |
Source | [Unsourced] |
ISCC–NBS descriptor | Strong reddish brown |
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) |
History
editAs the Industrial Revolution spread across Europe, chemists and manufacturers sought new red dyes that could be used for large-scale manufacture of textiles. One colour imported into Europe from Asia in the 18th and early 19th century was Turkey red, known in France as rouge d'Andrinople.
Turkey red used the root of the rubia (madder) plant as the colorant, but the process was long and complicated, involving multiple soaking of the fabrics in lye, olive oil, sheep's dung, and other ingredients.
Turkey red fabric was more expensive but resulted in a fine bright and lasting red, similar to carmine, perfectly suited to cotton, a fabric to which it had previously proven difficult to affix dye.[1] Aiding the colouring of Turkey red was the discovery of mordants in India; mordants create a bond between dyestuffs and fibres, and the volume of mordant applied to fibres impacts the strength of hue which the fibre or cloth takes on.[1] The Turkey red technique was used to dye and produce plain woven cotton cloths, which could also be used as a base for printing, using wooden blocks, copper plates, and/or cylindrical printing methods.[2]
Turkey red achieved its popularity as a natural dye for several reasons, namely that it was colourfast – it did not fade in light or when washed,[1] and did not transfer colour to other fabrics,[3] proving that completed fabrics could be used in both clothing and furnishing.
Beginning in the 1740s, this bright red colour was used to dye and print cotton textiles in England, Scotland, the Netherlands and France. Turkey red fabric, while retailed in Europe, was widely created for the export market, traded from Europe to India, Africa, the Middle East and America,[3] often to the detriment of the local economy, trade, and artisans.[4] Designs were often appropriated and cheaply retailed.[4] In 19th-century America, Turkey red was widely used in making traditional patchwork quilts.[5]
Turkey red and Scotland
editThe Turkey red dyeing technique was introduced to Scotland by French chemist Pierre Jacques Papillon.[2] Working with dyer George Macintosh and textile industrialist David Dale, in 1785 Papillon, Macintosh, and Dale founded the first Turkey red dyeworks in Dalmarnock, Scotland.[3]
Harnessing the business potential of the growing Turkey red market, numerous manufacturers also established their bleachfields, dyeworks and printworks in the Vale of Leven, as well as at several sites around Glasgow. At this time, the Vale of Leven, further up the river from Dalmarnock, was already the site of several bleachfields and printworks, and with ready supply of clean water from the river Leven, it was well suited to such production as Turkey red.[6] The Vale of Leven became synonymous with Turkey red, recognised as a centre of production in the 1820s.[6]
Manchester remained a key British competitor of the Turkey red industry in Scotland, and with expansion of production in India towards the end of the 19th century, the Scottish Turkey red trade was further challenged.[2] However, the profitability of production in Scotland endured. Amalgamation of the industry-leading Archibald Orr Ewing and Co., John Orr Ewing and Co., and William Stirling and Sons established the United Turkey Red Company Ltd in 1898, which continued to produce and trade until 1961, marking the end of the Turkey red industry in the Vale of Leven.[2]
The Process
editThe process of dyeing cotton Turkey red, as it was practiced in Turkey in the 18th century, was described in a text by a Manchester dyer in 1786:
- 1. Boil cotton in lye of Barilla or wood ash
- 2. Wash and dry
- 3. Steep in a liquor of Barilla ash or soda plus sheep's dung and olive oil
- 4. Rinse, let stand 12 hours, dry
- 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 three times.
- 6. Steep in a fresh liquor of Barilla ash or soda, sheep's dung, olive oil and white argol (potassium tartrate).
- 7. Rinse and dry
- 8. Repeat steps 6 and 7 three times.
- 9. Treat with gall nut solution
- 10. Wash and dry
- 11. Repeat steps 9 and 10 once.
- 12. Treat with a solution of alum, or alum mixed with ashes and Saccharum Saturni (lead acetate).
- 13. Dry, wash, dry.
- 14. Madder once or twice with Turkey madder to which a little sheep's blood is added.
- 15. Wash
- 16. Boil in a lye made of soda ash or the dung liquor
- 17. Wash and dry.[5]
See also
edit- Salu (cloth), a turkey red colored cloth.
Notes
edit- ^ a b c "Turkey Red". www.west-dunbarton.gov.uk. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ^ a b c d "Turkey Red and the Vale of Leven". Colouring the Nation. 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ^ a b c Darning Scotland's Textile Heritage, University of Glasgow (2019). Follow the Threads: An Introduction to the Textile Collections at the University of Glasgow Archives and Special Collections. Scotland: University of Glasgow and National Lottery Heritage Fun Collecting Cultures programme. pp. 6–9.
- ^ a b "Decolonising Scotland's design history". Decolonising Scotland's design history. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ^ a b John Wilson, An Essay on Light and Colours, Manchester, 1786. Pg. 21-22.
- ^ a b "Turkey Red Industry" (PDF). Retrieved 24 July 2023.
References
edit- Sarah Lowengard (2006), The Creation of Color in 18th Century Europe,Columbia University Press. (www.gutenberg-e.org/lowengard).
External links
edit- New International Encyclopedia. 1905. .