What color is Saffron?

Started by d_Guy, 08 February 2018, 04:10:37 PM

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paulr

I hesitate to say this but...

FSN's suggestion is a good one :o

Multi-shades makes sense when clothes are dyed with organic dyes, I would suggest using 3 or 5 different shades
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fsn

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paulr

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FierceKitty

10 February 2018, 01:39:59 AM #23 Last Edit: 10 February 2018, 01:43:55 AM by FierceKitty
Chuckle....

Btw, the point about monks' robes' matching my desert cloth is pretty accurate; when I first showed it to Lee, I posed in it and got a scowl from my pious better half in return. Just a touch of burnt umber added to the colour of my cloth (visible in many photographs of my battles, excluding pike-and-shot, ancient Chinese, and SYW. for which I use olive green), and you're ready to shave your head and pretend to be rejecting the pleasures of bodily existence.

Not only is saffron rather dear, it's far too tasty to waste on clothes, writes a nudist foodie. Save it for seafood stews, kebabs, kormas, and pilaos.
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d_Guy

Some great visuals, Kitty. I particularly like coriander but detest cilantro - both come from the same plant, I think.

SV52, It was looking at your Flodden Highlanders that decided me on going heavy on saffron. Its interesting that the ascension of Jame VI as James I seems to mark the transition from saffron to unbleached linen ( in both Ireland and Scotland). Correlation does not imply causation, but...  :) 
Vallejo Golden Brown might match the Citadel color.

OK - at least three* saffron colors it is!  Thanks all  :)

Terry, I use artistic acrylic dark ocher for the base colour of all my thatched rooves followed by dry brushing with the yellow ochre you mentioned. If I get enough contrast I may use one or both as well. Thanks for the reminder.  My artist acrylics are "out of sight, out of mind" (and I played with the thatched buildings for half the day yesterday).

* technically, fsn suggested 99 different shades while Paul suggested 3 to 5, just saying.
Encumbered by Idjits, we pressed on

fsn

According to a lichen dye website - "It's all an experiment and many factors determine the ultimate color: the age of the plant, the pH of the water, the type of fabric all are factors."



http://www.instructables.com/id/Creating-Lichen-Dyes-Letharia-vulpina-or-Wolf-Lich/
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SV52

To be honest I think it's possible to get too hung up on 'true' colours, especially in the good old bad old days.  Quality control I suspect was not at the top of the list. 

Vegetable dyes are prone to hosts of variables; quality of the growing season, quantity of dyestuff available, temperature both ambient and of the fluids, etc., etc. Not to mention laundry or the lack of it and the relatively poor 'fixing' of natural as opposed to artificial dyes. A motley crew would look fine to me  ;)
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Dye colour wasn't fixed until artificial dyes appeared, late 1800's, early 1900's. Before then the dye would bleach rapidly, and could even wash out if insufficient mordent (fixative) wasn't used. So the British red coat would be scarlet or even orange.....
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d_Guy

It is, of course, easier to paint using a very narrow palette, but I have very few units that use "uniform" colours (although in 10mm I now think uniformity looks better).

In our FIW and AWI re-enactment group we spent a good deal of time working with vegetable dyes (starting usually with collecting the plants and roots).
As has been said the results are highly variable and entail  much experimentation. Totally unexpected results were often our best results.

Ace's Civil War song reminded me of homespun which lead to digging this out of a storage chest:

We bought local (washed) wool, carded it and spun it in to yarn which was then dyed. The above was done with yellow onion skins.
I had forgotten about it but it seems to be in the "saffron" color family (although purely accidental).

Our loyalists regimental coats where made from pre-washed and tightly woven wool. We used nettles to get the green and the facings were done with madder (powered, from the Mother Country). The madder started a a fairly bright brick red but after seven years of "campaigning"
became almost a primrose pink.

We used mordants (fixers) on some of these but I can no longer remember what got what. 
Encumbered by Idjits, we pressed on

paulr

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d_Guy

 ;D ;D
Strangely, we watched a "Pawn Stars" recently were a full suit of clothes (breeches, waistcoat, and coat) owned and worn by George Washington was on offer (priced well beyond $1M). They were a light yellow sand colour but it turns out the original colour was hot pink!
Shame he wasn't wearing it for the famous Gilbert Stuart painting!
Encumbered by Idjits, we pressed on

steve_holmes_11

08 December 2018, 11:00:25 PM #32 Last Edit: 08 December 2018, 11:11:48 PM by steve_holmes_11
Quote from: d_Guy on 10 February 2018, 08:24:43 PM
;D ;D
Strangely, we watched a “Pawn Stars” recently were a full suit of clothes (breeches, waistcoat, and coat) owned and worn by George Washington was on offer (priced well beyond $1M). They were a light yellow sand colour but it turns out the original colour was hot pink!
Shame he wasn’t wearing it for the famous Gilbert Stuart painting!


I'd like to see Washington crossing the Delaware revamped in a hot pink livery.

Remember this was the guy who bested Napoleon in deadliest warrior.


On topic aside:

The saffron of modern day Buddhist monks (Google some temple images form Thailand) looks a lot more golden or orange than the baggy shirts I've seen form any depictions of Irish, or Scots highlanders.
Perhaps this is down to the monks having artificial dyes and opting or bolder colours.

Saffron comes from the powder form the sexy bits of the crocus.
Last time I checked (about a decade back) it retailed arounf £4,000 per kilo, but it's a fine powder so yield off each flower must be miniscule.
Efforts to persuade Afghan farmers to replace their poppy crops with the valuable crocus (War on drugs, nobody complained whenit was Donald Sutherland in Kelly's heroes) have largely met with failure.

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