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| Isatis
tinctoria (Woad) 1st year
rosette |
Direct
Contact dye
with second year Isatis
tinctoria
leaves, flowers and seeds. |
| Isatis
tinctoria
or Woad, is a
hardy biennial, native to the Mediterranean region and the British
Isles.
Known for 5,000 years as a source of natural blue dye, it was a plant
of serious economic importance. Today, with our dependence on
petro-chemical dyes, the value of this generous dye plant has been
overlooked. Considered a noxious weed in 10 Western US states, Woad has received an undeserved bad reputation. When properly cultivated it is a generous plant, valuable as a calcium rich fodder crop, with leaves containing, not only a natural indigo pigment, but also more anti-tumour gluco-brassican than broccoli, and seeds rich in antioxidant oils. The juice from compressed woad leaves is used in Germany as a natural antifungal treatment for wood. It grows rapidly in warm weather and regrows swifty after being cut for dye or fodder. Its growth is so rapid that although a great amount of leaves are needed for a small amount of indigo pigment, each hectacre, in our temperate climate, cultivated in woad, can produce as much indigo as a hectacre of tropical indigo in its climate zone -- typically 20 kg. of pure indigotin per hectacre. |
Visit Joybilee Farm and witness the magic of the natural woad indigo vat. Why natural dyes? |