Natural dye color swatches on cotton–linen fabric: indigo blue, weld yellow, and madder red tones side by side

How to Dye 220 cm Wide Cotton–Linen Fabric

TheMazi Guide: Indigo, Weld, Madder + 2 Bonus Recipes (Realistic Results, No Hype)

This guide is written specifically for our undyed cotton–linen fabric (approx. 90% cotton / ~10% linen) with a 220 cm (≈ 86.6 in) usable width and 200–210 GSM (≈ 5.9–6.2 oz/yd²). The extra width is the whole point: fewer seams, cleaner wide panels, and better results for curtains, table linens, and large projects.

  • Brutal truth: natural dyeing is not “copy-paste = same color.” Results vary with water chemistry, scouring, mordanting, dye concentration, temperature, time, and fabric movement. The recipes below are safe starting ranges, not guarantees.

The 2 steps that decide everything (cotton/linen reality)

1) Scour (clean the fabric first)

Scouring removes oils and residues that cause patchy dyeing—especially on cotton/linen blends. If you skip scouring, you’re gambling.

2) Mordant strategy for cellulose

For this fabric, the most reliable path for clean, even results is usually:

Tannin → Alum

  • Tannin helps dyes bond to cellulose fibers.
  • Alum improves stability and clarity for many plant dyes.

Shop dyes, tannin  & mordants: 

Shop the fabric:

5 practical tips for even dyeing on 220 cm wide fabric

  1. No crowding: tight folds = streaks and marks.
  2. Pre-wet fully: dry fabric goes in folded and dyes unevenly.
  3. Gentle, consistent movement: open the cloth and move it calmly—aggressive stirring can worsen unevenness.
  4. Cool soak for depth: some dyes deepen as the bath cools.
  5. Judge after drying: wet color lies; final tone shows when fully dry.

The 3 core recipes (best-performing, most requested)

These are the three dyes that most reliably deliver clear color directions on this fabric.

1) Indigo (Natural Indigo Extract) — Blues / Deep Indigo + Greens by Overdye

Color direction: pale sky → deep indigo (with multiple dips)

Reality check: indigo is vat dyeing, not a standard dye bath. Depth comes from multiple short dips + oxidation, not long soaking.

Starter method (practical):

  • Prepare a stable indigo vat (use your trusted vat method).
  • Dip the fabric 30–120 seconds → remove → oxidize 10–15 minutes.
  • 1–3 dips for light blue, 4–6 for mid tones, 7–10+ for deeper indigo.
  • Let the fabric fully oxidize between dips.

What changes results? Vat health, oxygen control, dip count, and keeping the cloth open (no tight folds).

Want greens (cleanest method)?

Dye yellow first with Weld, then overdye with indigo. Yellow + indigo = green/teal directions (results vary by depth and vat strength).


Product link: Natural Indigo Extract 

2) Weld (Weld Powder / Weld Extract) — Clean Yellow + Best Base for Greens

Color direction: lemon yellow → golden yellow

Weld is one of the cleanest yellows in natural dyeing—and it’s the perfect base for green overdyes.

Starter range:

  • Dye amount: ~5–12% WOF (lighter → deeper yellow)
  • 45–60 minutes gentle heat + cool soak to settle the tone
  • For cellulose, the most reliable prep is often Tannin → Alum → Weld

Modifier idea (use carefully):

  • A very light iron shift can move yellow toward chartreuse/olive.
  • Iron is powerful—go in tiny steps.

What changes results? Mordant strength, fabric movement, and iron amount.

Product links:  Weld Powder   /  Weld Extract 

3) Madder (Madder Root Powder / Madder Extract) — Blush → Terracotta → Brick

Color direction: soft blush → warm red → brick/terracotta

For this cotton–linen fabric, madder performs best with good prep—typically Tannin → Alum.

Starter range:

  • Dye amount: ~5–15% WOF
  • Controlled heat (hard boiling can muddy tones)
  • A cool soak after heating often deepens warmth

Tone control (pro move):

  • A very light iron dip can mute toward dusty rose / vintage tones (easy to overdo).
  • For warmer reds, improve prep and increase dye % rather than over-heating.

What changes results? Madder batch, water hardness, heat control, time.

Product links:  Madder Root Powder  / Madder Extract 

2 bonus recipes (fast wins)

Bonus 1) Pomegranate Peel — Soft Yellow / Beige / Stone Neutrals

Color direction: soft yellow → beige/stone

Starter range: ~8–20% WOF

Great for gentle neutrals and can be a useful base in eco printing workflows.

Product link: Pomegranate Peel 

Bonus 2) Black Walnut — Browns / Deep Earth Tones

Color direction: light brown → deep brown

Starter range: ~5–15% WOF

A strong, earthy dye choice with a reliable direction.

Product link: Black Walnut 

What to make with this fabric (why 220 cm matters)

  • Curtains and wide panels (fewer seams, cleaner finish)
  • Tablecloths, runners, napkins
  • Bedding, throws, large home textiles
  • Wide garments (robe/kimono/overshirt)
  • Studio sampling + eco printing projects
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