They also produced the color purple or lavender from the murex mollusks that were found on the seacoast. Dye makers rubbed two of the mollusks together in order to extract the dye.

That sounds simple enough, but it also involved some real chemistry:

https://hal.science/hal-03202592/document

Purple was one of the most expensive and difficult dyes to acquire and process. 1 gram takes 10,000 snails. In Europe, it was solely used for kings.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments
0 points

This feels like a dumb question, but I’ll ask it anyway - Why not just mix red & blue dyes?

permalink
report
reply
0 points
*

I think it’s because the colours are generated by a chemical reaction from e.g. woad (-> blue) or madder (-> red) which happen under different conditions.

permalink
report
parent
reply

todayilearned

!todayilearned@lemmy.world

Create post

todayilearned

Community stats

  • 7

    Monthly active users

  • 13

    Posts

  • 107

    Comments

Community moderators