Natural Dyes Powder creates beautiful natural dyes on fabric which are natural liek cotton , silk, linen , wool and many more.

Natural Dyes in Indian Textiles — The Swadeshi Colours of Nature

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Imagine a time when colours did not come from factories.

There were no chemical laboratories, no synthetic pigments, no industrial dye houses. Yet textiles from India dazzled the world with colours so rich that traders sailed across oceans to find their secret.

These colours came from the earth.

From crushed flowers, soaked roots, tree bark, seeds, minerals, and leaves. From forests, fields, and village gardens.

For thousands of years, Indian artisans perfected the art of natural dyes India has always known — turning humble plant extracts into colours that could last generations. This is the heart of the swadeshi textile tradition and the soul of handloom fabric India has gifted to the world. It is also a proud part of our Atmanirbhar craft heritage.

This knowledge was not written in manuals. It was passed from guru to artisan, from mother to daughter, from village to village.

When we speak about Swadeshi, we are really speaking about this deep relationship between nature, craft, and community.

Natural dyes are not just colours.
They are a living memory of India's ecological wisdom.

When Colour Came from Plants

Before synthetic dyes were invented in Europe in 1856, India was already a global leader in natural colour production.

Indian textiles coloured with plant dyes travelled along ancient trade routes to Persia, Egypt, Rome, Southeast Asia and Africa.

From the natural dye handloom traditions of Bengal to the vegetable dye saree clusters of Rajasthan, and the celebrated Indian block print fabric traditions of Ajrakh (Gujarat & Rajasthan) and Bagru block printing — India's natural dye heritage is vast and GI-tagged.

Here are the natural dye powders we work with — each sourced from plants, each carrying centuries of craft knowledge:

Dye Name

Source Plant

Botanical Name

Colour Produced

Indigo (नील)

Indigo plant leaves

Indigofera tinctoria

Sky blue to deep navy blue

Indian Madder (मजीठ)

Madder root

Rubia cordifolia

Turkey red, orange-red, peach

Blood Red

Fermented Madder + Soap Nut

Rubia cordifolia

Blood red, dark maroon

Marigold (गेंदा)

Marigold flower petals

Tagetes erecta

Bright yellow shades

Pomegranate (अनार छिलका)

Pomegranate rind

Punica granatum

Mud yellow to green-yellow

Mango Yellow

Pomegranate + Turmeric blend

Punica granatum / Curcuma longa

Mango yellow

Orange

Turmeric + Pomegranate + Madder blend

Blend

Orange shades

Annatto

Annatto seeds

Bixa orellana

Orange shades

Flame of the Forest

Butea Monosperma flowers

Butea monosperma

Orange shades

Sappanwood

Sappan tree

Caesalpinia sappan

Pink to orangish red

Alkanet

Alkanet plant root

Alkanna tinctoria

Grey to purple

Acacia Catechu (कत्था)

Acacia Catechu bark

Acacia catechu

Brown shades

 Natural Indian Madder powder 100g from Rubia Cordifolia root. Produces Turkey Red and Orange-Red shades. Handmade natural dye for textile dyeing. Made in India.

Left: Indigo dye powder — the blue that changed history. Right: Indian Madder — the root of red.

Each plant carried its own personality.
Some gave vibrant colour instantly, while others required patience, fermentation, or careful preparation.

Natural dyeing was never rushed. It was a slow craft guided by experience, weather, and instinct.

Indigo: The Blue that Changed History

Among all natural dyes, Indigo holds a special place in India's history.

Known in Hindi as नील, Indigo comes from the plant Indigofera tinctoria. For centuries India was the world's main source of this remarkable blue pigment.

But indigo dyeing is not as simple as boiling leaves. It is closer to alchemy.

First, the leaves are soaked in water and fermented. This releases a compound that later becomes the famous blue pigment called indigotin.

When cloth is dipped into the indigo vat, something magical happens. At first the fabric turns green. Then, as it touches the air, oxygen slowly transforms the colour into deep blue.

For generations, artisans have watched this moment with quiet satisfaction — the moment when colour is born.

This process uses no synthetic chemicals, only plant fermentation and oxygen from the air. Nature itself becomes the dye master.

Indigo Dye Powder 100g | Natural Blue Dye for Textile | House of Swadeshi

Our Indigo Dye Powder — extracted from Indigofera tinctoria leaves, producing shades from sky blue to deep navy.

The same indigo tradition lives on in the Ajrakh block print scarves — where indigo-dyed fabric meets centuries-old resist printing techniques from Gujarat and Rajasthan.

The Secret of Mordanting

Natural dyes do not behave like synthetic dyes.

To make colours permanent, traditional dyers use a technique called mordanting. A mordant prepares the fabric so that the dye bonds strongly with the fibre.

Interestingly, mordants can also change the shade of a colour. The same plant dye might produce yellow, olive, or brown depending on the mordant used. This is why natural dyeing is both science and art.

Mordant Name

Hindi Name

Source

Effect on Fabric

Best Used With

Alum (Fitkari)

फिटकरी

Naturally occurring mineral salt

Brightens colours; most widely used mordant; colourless

All natural dyes; especially madder, marigold, indigo

Myrobalan (Harad)

हरड़

Fruits of Terminalia chebula

Pre-mordant for cellulose fibres; also produces pale yellow on its own

Cotton, linen; used before alum for better dye uptake

Gallnut (Majuphal)

माजूफल

Nutgalls of Oak tree

Rich in tannin; increases dye uptake significantly on cellulose

Cotton, jute; used before alum mordant

Iron (Loha / Kasish)

कसीस

Ferrous sulphate (iron water)

Saddens / darkens colours; shifts yellows to olive, reds to brown-black

Madder, pomegranate, acacia; used for dark and earthy tones

Copper Sulphate

तूतिया

Copper salt

Shifts colours towards green; enhances depth

Indigo, marigold, pomegranate; for green-toned results

Tannin (from bark & seeds)

तनिन

Plant tannins from oak gall, pomegranate rind, acacia bark

Natural mordant; improves fastness on protein and cellulose fibres

All fibres; especially useful as a pre-treatment

Complete natural dye kit for fabric with 7 dye powders and 3 mordants in 50g packs. Includes recycled cotton fabric and dye instructions manual. Made in India.

Our Natural Dye Kit — 7 dye powders, 3 mordants, fabric & instructions. Everything you need to begin your natural dyeing journey.

Marigold Dye Powder 100g | Natural Yellow Dye for Textile | House of Swadeshi Handwoven yellow silk cushion cover naturally dyed with marigold flowers. Recycled cotton tassels at four corners. 16x16 inches. Sustainable luxury.

Left: Marigold Dye Powder. Right: The same golden yellow, woven into our Yellow Silk Cushion Cover — naturally dyed with marigold flowers.

Ayurvedic Dyes: Where Colour Meets Wellness

Ancient Indian texts also mention the use of dyes within Ayurvedic traditions.

Ayurveda sees colour not only as decoration but as an influence on the body's balance.

Certain plants used for dyeing are also powerful Ayurvedic ingredients. Examples include:

Hindi

English

Botanical Name

हल्दी

Turmeric

Curcuma longa

मंजिष्ठा

Manjistha

Rubia cordifolia

नीम

Neem

Azadirachta indica

आंवला

Amla

Phyllanthus emblica

Turmeric dyed cloth, for example, was often worn for its antimicrobial properties, while manjistha was associated with purification.

These practices remind us that traditional textiles were deeply connected to wellness, environment, and daily life.

This Ayurvedic wisdom extends beyond fabric. Our Silk Eco-Printed Herbal Eye Pillow — crafted using natural dyes and infused with calming herbs — is a beautiful example of colour and wellness coming together in one piece.

Experience deep relaxation with our silk eco-printed herbal eye pillow, crafted using natural dyes and infused with calming herbs.

Our Silk Herbal Eye Pillow — where Ayurvedic plant wisdom meets natural dyeing craft.

Naturally Dyed Textiles You Can Wear & Use

At House of Swadeshi, we bring this living tradition into everyday textiles. Whether you are looking for a natural dye scarf online India or an organic cotton handloom towel, our artisans craft each piece using the same plant-based dyes described above.

Explore our handwoven, naturally dyed range — from scarves to throws — all made by Indian artisans using traditional methods.

Why Natural Dyes Matter Today

Today the global textile industry produces enormous amounts of chemical pollution from synthetic dyes. Natural dyeing offers a powerful alternative.

Natural dyes are:

• biodegradable
• renewable
• non-toxic
• gentle on skin
• safer for artisans
• environmentally responsible

Most importantly, they reconnect us with the rhythms of nature. Each harvest season, each plant, each climate produces slightly different colours. No two dye batches are ever exactly the same. And perhaps that is the true beauty of natural dyes. They are alive.

Reviving the Swadeshi Colour Tradition

India's natural dye heritage once coloured the world. Reviving this tradition is not only about preserving history. It is about building a sustainable future for textiles.

Through education, workshops, and conscious craftsmanship, the knowledge of natural dyeing can continue to inspire new generations.

At House of Swadeshi, we honour this timeless craft — where colour is drawn from the earth, guided by tradition, and shaped by human hands.

Because true luxury is not artificial. It grows from nature. And that is luxury, the Indian way.

Choose swadeshi products online. Choose made in India natural textiles. Be vocal for local.

Shop Natural Dye Collection

Frequently Asked Questions

What are natural dyes?

Natural dyes are plant, mineral and insect-based pigments used in Indian textiles for centuries — from indigo  to Marigold Flowers.

What are natural dyes in Indian textiles?

Natural dyes are colour pigments sourced from plants, minerals, and organic matter. India has one of the world’s oldest natural dyeing traditions — from indigo blue in South India to pomegranate yellow in Rajasthan.

Which plants are used for natural dyeing in India?

Indian artisans use indigo for blue, turmeric for gold, madder root for red, and pomegranate rind for tan — all grown in India.

Which Indian crafts use natural dyes?

Ajrakh (Gujarat & Rajasthan), Bagru block printing, Kalamkari (Andhra Pradesh), and Dabu printing (Rajasthan) are among the most celebrated swadeshi craft traditions using natural dyes.

Is natural dye fabric safe to wear?

Yes. Natural dye fabrics are free from harsh chemicals, making them gentler on skin and better for the environment. They are a key part of India’s swadeshi textile tradition.

Why choose natural dye over synthetic?

Natural dyes are biodegradable, non-toxic, and softer on skin — making them the true swadeshi choice for eco-conscious Indians.

Where can I buy naturally dyed Indian textiles online?

House of Swadeshi offers a range of handwoven, naturally dyed textiles including organic cotton towels, scarves, and throws — all made by Indian artisans using traditional methods.

 

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