How Dye Gets Into Silk
Imagine your favorite shirt gets dirty, you soak it in water with soap, and the dirt comes out. With silk dyeing, it's similar: you put the silk into warm water mixed with dye. The dye moves through the water and grabs onto the silk threads, just like wet paint sticks to paper.
Why Silk Takes Dye So Well
Silk has a special texture, it’s smooth and slightly sticky, kind of like a ripe banana. This makes it really good at holding on to dye, so the color stays bright and doesn’t fade easily. It's like when you dip your finger in paint, the more it sticks, the better the color looks.
After soaking for a while, you rinse the silk with water, and voilà! You have a beautifully colored piece of silk, just like painting with liquid magic, but without the word magic.
Examples
- A child learns that silk absorbs dye differently than cotton because of its smooth surface.
- A simple experiment with food coloring shows how silk takes on color.
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See also
- How Does Silk Differ from Cotton at a Molecular Level?
- What is silk? - Leizu?
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