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The seeds of the Kattha Tree are eaten and contain protein. The extract from the Kattha Tree is used for red coloring or dye.
A zantewood is the wood from a tree better knwon as the fustic. There are two varieties of fustic, one, a tropical American tree, produces a yellow dye, one, a European tree, produces an orange dye.
Zante, also known as zantewood, is another name for the fustic, a tropical American tree whose wood produces a yellow dye
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The Alnus ilcana rugoda is the speckled alder tree. The Zuni used the bark of this tree to dye deerskin leather brown. Moose, muskrats, rabbits, and beavers eat the twigs. Several birds eat the seeds.
the dye pot comes with the yarn maker -Genevieve
The best bet for a natural (IE no preservatives, no artificial flavours or colors) yellowish-red dye for food and fabric is *Beta Carotene*. This colouring agent is most commonly seen in carrots, and gives them their orange colour. The original colour of carrots was actually purple; beta carotene was added later to make them orange.
the dye penetrates the cuticle and into the cortex, and under a microscope it will look yellowish if it has bleached.
Reward from Rosetta quest called seeds for sorting.
An annatto is a tropical American evergreen shrub, Latin name Bixa orellana, also known as the lipstick tree, the fruit or seed of this true, or the orange-red dye obtained from this seed.
Black describes the color of dye from hinau tree bark. The tree in question (Elaeocarpus hinau) has bark that produces traditional dyes for native New Zealand baskets and flax mats. The addition of a rust of iron results in non-corrosive ink.
Henna is a shrub, specifically the Lawsonia inermis plant. It is a small flowering shrub that is cultivated for its leaves, which are used to create dye for temporary body art and hair coloring.