21.3.15

The Dyer's Guide. Chapter VI. On Dyeing Cotton And Silk. Skein silk for yellow.

The Dyer's Guide
Being a Compendium of the Art of Dyeing
Linen, Cotton, Silk, Wool, Muslin, Dresses, Furniture, &c. &c.

With The Method of
Scouring Wool, Bleaching Cotton, &c.
And
Directions for Ungumming Silk, And For Whitening And Sulphuring Silk And Wool.
And Also
An Inttroductory Epitome of The Leading Facts in Chemistry, As Connected With The Art of Dyeing.

By Thomas Packer,
Dyer and Practical Chemist.

"Cet arte est un des plus utiles et des plus merveilleux qu'on connoisse."
- Chaptal.

"There is no art which depends so much on chemistry as dyeing."
- Garnett.

Second Edition,
Corrected and Materially Improved.

London:
Printed for Sherwood, Gilbert, And Piper,
Paternoster-Row.
1830.

This is to be boiled with about twenty pounds of soap for every hundred pounds of silk. When boiled it is to be washed and alumed, and again washed, dressed, and put on the rod, seven or eight ounces to a rod, and then dipped and returned in the yellow liquor, in the proportion of two pounds of weld to one pound of silk.

The liquor is not to be hotter than the hand can bear while the silk is in it. The silk, when in the vessel for dyeing, should cause the liquor to float within two inches of the edge. The silk must be taken out and the liquor strengthened, if the pattern is to be very full; when full enough, one pound of pearl-ash for every twenty pounds of silk must be dissolved in some warm water; about a quarter of this liquor is put into the dye bath: take the silk out while you put in the liquor, stir the mixture well. Put in the silk and work it, turning and returning it as at first. After seven or eight returns, one of the hanks is to be taken out, wrung, and tried at the peg, and, if sufficiently full and bright, all is well; if not enough so, some more pearl-ash liquor must be added, and the silk worked as before, till the shade required is obtained.

For jonquil it may be necessary to add some annatto when you put in the pearl-ash.

To make the light shades, such as canary or lemon, perfectly white, they must be boiled with thirty pounds of soap to a hundred of silk; and if these be not azured to be dyed, they must have a little of the blue vat, and a little of the weld liquor in water, (the whole mixture being as hot, but no hotter than the hand will bear,) and the silk ready on rods, must be quickly worked through and out. For deeper lemons the same process must be used as for the fuller yellows; only less weld, and twenty pounds of soap will do for a hundred pounds of silk in whitening it.

The blue of the vat is only used for such articles as are to have a green cast, and that extremely light; the aluraing also should be in a weaker alum liquor: for light lemons it should be prepared in a separate liquor.

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